| Literature DB >> 32070438 |
S N Facente1,2,3, E Grebe1,2,4, C D Pilcher2, M P Busch1,2, G Murphy5, A Welte4.
Abstract
Accurate methods for determining the duration of HIV infection at the individual level are valuable in many settings, including many critical research studies and in clinical practice (especially for acute infection). Since first published in 2003, the 'Fiebig staging system' has been used as the primary way of classifying early HIV infection into five sequential stages based on HIV test result patterns in newly diagnosed individuals. However, Fiebig stages can only be assigned to individuals who produce both a negative and a positive test result on the same day, on specific pairs of tests of varying 'sensitivity'. Further, in the past 16 years HIV-testing technology has evolved substantially, and three of the five key assays used to define Fiebig stages are no longer widely used. To address these limitations, we developed an improved and more general framework for estimating the duration of HIV infection by interpreting any combination of diagnostic test results, whether obtained on single or multiple days, into an estimated date of detectable infection, or EDDI. A key advantage of the EDDI method over Fiebig staging is that it allows for the generation of a point estimate, as well as an associated credibility interval for the date of first detectable infection, for any person who has at least one positive and one negative HIV test of any kind. The tests do not have to be run on the same day; they do not have to be run during the acute phase of infection and the method does not rely on any special pairing of tests to define 'stages' of infection. The size of the interval surrounding the EDDI (and therefore the precision of the estimate itself) depends largely on the length of time between negative and positive tests. The EDDI approach is also flexible, seamlessly incorporating any assay for which there is a reasonable diagnostic delay estimate. An open-source, free online tool includes a user-updatable curated database of published diagnostic delays. HIV diagnostics have evolved tremendously since that original publication more than 15 years ago, and it is time to similarly evolve the methods used to estimate timing of infection. The EDDI method is a flexible and rigorous way to estimate the timing of HIV infection in a continuously evolving diagnostic landscape.Entities:
Keywords: Diagnostics; HIV; infection staging
Year: 2020 PMID: 32070438 PMCID: PMC7078584 DOI: 10.1017/S0950268820000503
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Epidemiol Infect ISSN: 0950-2688 Impact factor: 2.451
Comparison of Fiebig staging substituting newer assays, with and without adjustment for diagnostic delays
| Subject | Test date | Screening | Supplemental | Fiebig stage (substitution) | Adjusted date of infection | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Test | Result | Test | Result | Stage | Days since infection | Est. infection date | Days since infection | Est. infection date | ||
| V | 1 April 2018 | OraQuick RT (whole blood) | Negative | Aptima Qual RNA | Positive | I–II | 16.2 | 21.8 | ||
| W | 30 May 2018 | INSTI RT | Negative | BioPlex 2200 Ag-Ab | Positive | II | 18.7 | 11 May 2018 | 20.5 | 9 May 2018 |
| X | 31 July 2018 | ARCHITECT | Positive | Geenius | Negative | II–III | 20.3 | 10 July 2018 | 22.0 | 8 July 2018 |
| Y | 30 September 2018 | GS + 0 | Positive | Geenius | Negative | III | 22.9 | 7 September 2018 | 25.7 | 4 September 2018 |
| Z | 30 November 2018 | GS + 0 | Positive | Geenius | Indeterminate | IV | 27.3 | 2 November 2018 | 29.7 | 31 October 2018 |
OraQuick RT, OraSure OraQuick ADVANCE rapid test; INSTI, INSTI HIV-1/2 1-minute rapid test; ARCHITECT, Abbott ARCHITECT HIV Ag/Ab Combo; GS + 0, BioRad GenScreen HIV-1/HIV-2 + 0 EIA; Aptima Qual RNA, Aptima HIV-1 RNA qualitative assay; BioPlex 2200 Ag-Ab, BioPlex 2200 Ag-Ab Combo; Geenius, BioRad Geenius; Est., estimated.
Estimated infection dates based on Fiebig stages are obtained by subtracting from the date of diagnosis: half of the duration of the stage at diagnosis, as well as the cumulative duration of all prior stages and the eclipse phase, as estimated by Fiebig et al. [14].
As above, but Fiebig stage durations adjusted for the diagnostic delays of the newer assays used in each case.
Comparison of Fiebig staging, 4th gen staging and the EDDI method for the estimation of infection timing in six individual scenarios
| Subject | Test date | Screening | Supplemental | Fiebig stage (actual) | Fiebig stage (substitution) | 4th gen stage (substitution) | EP-DDI | LP-DDI | EDDI | ||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Test | Result | Test | Result | Stage | Est. infection date | Stage | Est. infection date | Stage | Est. infection date | Date | Date | Date | Est. infection date | ||
| A | 14 May 2004 | GenSys EIA | Negative | Roche Amplicor Ultrasensitive | Positive | I | 30 April 2004 | I | 30 April 2004 | 1 | 2 May 2004 | 18 April 2004 | 9 May 2004 | 28 April 2004 | 21 April 2004 |
| A | 26 May 2004 | GenSys EIA | Negative | Western blot | Indeterminate | IV | IV | 3 | 30 April 2004 | 9 May 2004 | 4 May 2004 | 27 April 2004 | |||
| A | 16 Jun 2004 | GenSys EIA | Positive | Western blot | Positive | V | V | 3 | 30 April 2004 | 9 May 2004 | 4 May 2004 | 27 April 2004 | |||
| B | 1 January 2016 | Statpak RT | Negative | Aptima | Negative | – | – | – | – | 25 December 2015 | – | – | – | ||
| B | 15 February 2016 | ARCHITECT | Positive | Geenius | Positive | V | 25 December 2015 | 17 January 2016 | 5 January 2016 | ||||||
| C | 15 February 2016 | Statpak RT | Negative | Aptima | Negative | – | – | – | – | 8 February 2016 | – | – | – | ||
| C | 21 July 2016 | Statpak RT | Negative | Aptima | Positive | I | 7 July 2016 | 1 | 9 Jul 2016 | 27 June 2016 | 14 July 2016 | 5 July 2016 | 28 June 2016 | ||
| C | 27 July 2016 | ARCHITECT | Positive | III–V | 2–3 | 27 June 2016 | 14 July 2016 | 5 July 2016 | 28 June 2016 | ||||||
| D | 20 October 2014 | Determine Combo RT | Ag+/Ab− | Abbott m2000 | 0.8 million | II | 1 October 2014 | 2 | 3 October 2014 | 28 September 2014 | 7 October 2014 | 2 October 2014 | 25 September 2014 | ||
| D | 27 October 2014 | ARCHITECT | Positive | Geenius | Negative | III | 3 | 28 September 2014 | 7 October 2014 | 2 October 2014 | 25 September 2014 | ||||
| D | 15 November 2014 | ARCHITECT | Positive | Geenius | Positive | V | 3 | 28 September 2014 | 7 October 2014 | 2 October 2014 | 25 September 2014 | ||||
| E | 1 July 2017 | OraQuick RT | Negative | – | – | – | – | 3 June 2017 | – | – | – | ||||
| E | 2 December 2017 | OraQuick RT | Positive | Geenius | Positive | V | 3 June 2017 | 3 November 2017 | 18 August 2017 | ||||||
| F | 1 September 2018 | OraQuick RT | Positive | Geenius | Positive | VI | – | 3 August 2018 | – | – | |||||
GenSys EIA, Genetic Systems HIV-1/2 antibody; Statpak RT, Alere Clearview Stat-Pak rapid test; Determine Combo RT, Abbott Determine HIV-1/2 Ag/Ab Combo; Abbott m2000, Abbott Real Time HIV01 v1.0 m2000sp/m2000rt viral load assay; OraQuick RT, OraSure OraQuick ADVANCE rapid test used on whole blood; Roche Amplicor Ultrasensitive, Roche Amplicor Monitor v1.5 (ultrasensitive – detection threshold 50 copies/ml); WB, BioRad GS HIV-1 western blot; Aptima (pool of 10), Aptima HIV-1 RNA qualitative assay run in a pool of 10, then repeated on a single specimen to identify this subject as the positive specimen in the reactive pool; ARCHITECT, Abbott ARCHITECT HIV Ag/Ab Combo; UniGold RT, Trinity Biotech Unigold Rapid HIV test; Geenius, BioRad Geenius; Est., estimated; EP-DDI, earliest plausible date of detectable infection; LP-DDI, latest plausible date of detectable infection; EDDI, estimated date of detectable infection.
Estimated infection dates based on Fiebig stages are obtained by subtracting from the date of diagnosis: half of the duration of the stage at diagnosis, as well as the cumulative duration of all prior stages and the eclipse phase, as estimated by Fiebig et al. [14].
Estimated infection dates based on 4th gen stages are obtained by subtracting from the date of diagnosis: the median number of days from the history of HIV exposure for individuals diagnosed in that stage, as reported by Ananworanich et al. [21].
Estimated infection dates are obtained by subtracting from the EDDI: the Fiebig et al. [14] estimate of the eclipse phase, adjusted for the relative diagnostic delay of the nucleic acid amplification testing (NAT) assay used in that analysis.
Fig. 1.Comparison of EDDI method and Fiebig method for understanding time since infection.