Repeated false reactive ADVIA centaur® and bio-rad Geenius™ HIV tests in a patient self-administering anabolic steroids

Abstract Background An individual is considered HIV positive when a confirmatory HIV-1/HIV-2 differentiation test returns positive following an initial reactive antigen/antibody combination screen. Falsely reactive HIV screens have been reported in patients with various concomitant infectious and au...

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Main Authors: Polly Tsybina, Maurice Hennink, Tania Diener, Jessica Minion, Amanda Lang, Stephanie Lavoie, John Kim, Alexander Wong
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2020-01-01
Series:BMC Infectious Diseases
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1186/s12879-019-4722-8
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spelling doaj-6241e3ffc7924ab3b958ef234ec7e86b2021-01-10T12:11:50ZengBMCBMC Infectious Diseases1471-23342020-01-012011410.1186/s12879-019-4722-8Repeated false reactive ADVIA centaur® and bio-rad Geenius™ HIV tests in a patient self-administering anabolic steroidsPolly Tsybina0Maurice Hennink1Tania Diener2Jessica Minion3Amanda Lang4Stephanie Lavoie5John Kim6Alexander Wong7Department of Medicine, University of SaskatchewanPopulation and Public Health, Saskatchewan Health AuthorityPopulation and Public Health, Saskatchewan Health AuthorityDepartment of Pathology and Laboratory Medicine, University of SaskatchewanRoy Romanow Provincial LaboratoryNational Microbiology LaboratoryNational Microbiology LaboratoryDivision of Infectious Diseases, University of SaskatchewanAbstract Background An individual is considered HIV positive when a confirmatory HIV-1/HIV-2 differentiation test returns positive following an initial reactive antigen/antibody combination screen. Falsely reactive HIV screens have been reported in patients with various concomitant infectious and autoimmune conditions. Falsely positive confirmatory HIV differentiation assays are seen less frequently, but have been observed in cases of pregnancy, pulmonary embolism, and malaria. Case presentation A healthy 27 year-old man was referred after a reactive ADVIA Centaur® HIV Ag/Ab screen and positive Bio-Rad Geenius™ HIV 1/2 Confirmatory assay, suggesting HIV-1 infection. The patient’s HIV viral load was undetectable prior to initiation of antiretroviral therapy, and remained undetectable on subsequent testing after initiation of antiretroviral therapy. Both Centaur® and Geenius™ tests were repeated and returned reactive. As this patient was believed to be at low risk of acquiring HIV infection, samples were additionally run on Genscreen™ HIV-1 Ag assay and Fujirebio Inno-LIA™ HIV-1/2 score, with both returning non-reactive. For confirmation, the patient’s proviral HIV DNA testing was negative, confirming the initial results as being falsely positive. The patient disclosed that he had been using a variety of anabolic steroids before and during the time of HIV testing. Discussion and conclusions The erroneous diagnosis of HIV can result in decreased quality of life and adverse effects of antiretroviral therapy if initiated, hence the importance of interpreting the results of HIV testing in the context of an individual patient. This reports suggests a potential association between the use of anabolic steroids and falsely-reactive HIV testing.https://doi.org/10.1186/s12879-019-4722-8False positive HIV testBio-rad GeeniusFalse reactive HIV screenAnabolic steroids
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Polly Tsybina
Maurice Hennink
Tania Diener
Jessica Minion
Amanda Lang
Stephanie Lavoie
John Kim
Alexander Wong
spellingShingle Polly Tsybina
Maurice Hennink
Tania Diener
Jessica Minion
Amanda Lang
Stephanie Lavoie
John Kim
Alexander Wong
Repeated false reactive ADVIA centaur® and bio-rad Geenius™ HIV tests in a patient self-administering anabolic steroids
BMC Infectious Diseases
False positive HIV test
Bio-rad Geenius
False reactive HIV screen
Anabolic steroids
author_facet Polly Tsybina
Maurice Hennink
Tania Diener
Jessica Minion
Amanda Lang
Stephanie Lavoie
John Kim
Alexander Wong
author_sort Polly Tsybina
title Repeated false reactive ADVIA centaur® and bio-rad Geenius™ HIV tests in a patient self-administering anabolic steroids
title_short Repeated false reactive ADVIA centaur® and bio-rad Geenius™ HIV tests in a patient self-administering anabolic steroids
title_full Repeated false reactive ADVIA centaur® and bio-rad Geenius™ HIV tests in a patient self-administering anabolic steroids
title_fullStr Repeated false reactive ADVIA centaur® and bio-rad Geenius™ HIV tests in a patient self-administering anabolic steroids
title_full_unstemmed Repeated false reactive ADVIA centaur® and bio-rad Geenius™ HIV tests in a patient self-administering anabolic steroids
title_sort repeated false reactive advia centaur® and bio-rad geenius™ hiv tests in a patient self-administering anabolic steroids
publisher BMC
series BMC Infectious Diseases
issn 1471-2334
publishDate 2020-01-01
description Abstract Background An individual is considered HIV positive when a confirmatory HIV-1/HIV-2 differentiation test returns positive following an initial reactive antigen/antibody combination screen. Falsely reactive HIV screens have been reported in patients with various concomitant infectious and autoimmune conditions. Falsely positive confirmatory HIV differentiation assays are seen less frequently, but have been observed in cases of pregnancy, pulmonary embolism, and malaria. Case presentation A healthy 27 year-old man was referred after a reactive ADVIA Centaur® HIV Ag/Ab screen and positive Bio-Rad Geenius™ HIV 1/2 Confirmatory assay, suggesting HIV-1 infection. The patient’s HIV viral load was undetectable prior to initiation of antiretroviral therapy, and remained undetectable on subsequent testing after initiation of antiretroviral therapy. Both Centaur® and Geenius™ tests were repeated and returned reactive. As this patient was believed to be at low risk of acquiring HIV infection, samples were additionally run on Genscreen™ HIV-1 Ag assay and Fujirebio Inno-LIA™ HIV-1/2 score, with both returning non-reactive. For confirmation, the patient’s proviral HIV DNA testing was negative, confirming the initial results as being falsely positive. The patient disclosed that he had been using a variety of anabolic steroids before and during the time of HIV testing. Discussion and conclusions The erroneous diagnosis of HIV can result in decreased quality of life and adverse effects of antiretroviral therapy if initiated, hence the importance of interpreting the results of HIV testing in the context of an individual patient. This reports suggests a potential association between the use of anabolic steroids and falsely-reactive HIV testing.
topic False positive HIV test
Bio-rad Geenius
False reactive HIV screen
Anabolic steroids
url https://doi.org/10.1186/s12879-019-4722-8
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