Laboratory Evaluation of the Alere q Point-of-Care System for Early Infant HIV Diagnosis.

INTRODUCTION:Early infant diagnosis (EID) and prompt linkage to care are critical to minimise the high morbidity and mortality associated with infant HIV infection. Attrition in the "EID cascade" is common; however, point-of-care (POC) EID assays with same-day result could facilitate promp...

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Main Authors: Nei-yuan Hsiao, Lorna Dunning, Max Kroon, Landon Myer
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2016-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC4816318?pdf=render
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spelling doaj-f36343f2eae942199271bfb96da6ed992020-11-24T21:47:52ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032016-01-01113e015267210.1371/journal.pone.0152672Laboratory Evaluation of the Alere q Point-of-Care System for Early Infant HIV Diagnosis.Nei-yuan HsiaoLorna DunningMax KroonLandon MyerINTRODUCTION:Early infant diagnosis (EID) and prompt linkage to care are critical to minimise the high morbidity and mortality associated with infant HIV infection. Attrition in the "EID cascade" is common; however, point-of-care (POC) EID assays with same-day result could facilitate prompt linkage of HIV-infected infant to treatment. Despite a number of POC EID assays in development, few have been independently evaluated and data on new technologies are urgently needed to inform policy. METHODS:We compared Alere q 1/2 Detect POC system laboratory test characteristics with the local standard of care (SOC), Roche CAP/CTM HIV-1 qualitative PCR in an independent laboratory-based evaluation in Cape Town, South Africa. Routinely EID samples collected between November 2013 and September 2014 were each tested by both SOC and POC systems. Repeat testing was done to troubleshoot any discrepancy between POC and SOC results. RESULTS:Overall, 1098 children with a median age of 47 days (IQR, 42-117) were included. Birth PCR (age <7 days) comprised of 8% (n = 92) tests while 56% (n = 620) of children tested as part of routine EID (ages 6-14 weeks). In the overall direct comparison, Alere q Detect achieved sensitivity of 95.5% (95% CI, 91.7-97.9%) and a specificity of 99.8% (95% CI, 99.1-100%). Following repeat testing of discordant samples and exclusion of any inconclusive results, the POC assay sensitivity and specificity were 96.9% (95% CI 93.4-98.9%) and 100% (lower 95% CI 98%) respectively. Among birth PCR tests the POC assay had slightly lower sensitivity (93.3% vs 96.5% in routine EID) and higher assay error rate (10% vs 5% in samples of older children, p = 0.04). CONCLUSION:Our results indicate this POC assay performs well for EID in the laboratory. The high specificity and thus high positive predictive value would suggest a positive POC result may be adequate for immediate infant ART initiation. While POC testing for EID may have particular utility for birth testing at delivery facilities, the lower sensitivity and error rate requires further attention, as does field implementation of POC EID technologies in other clinical care settings.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC4816318?pdf=render
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Nei-yuan Hsiao
Lorna Dunning
Max Kroon
Landon Myer
spellingShingle Nei-yuan Hsiao
Lorna Dunning
Max Kroon
Landon Myer
Laboratory Evaluation of the Alere q Point-of-Care System for Early Infant HIV Diagnosis.
PLoS ONE
author_facet Nei-yuan Hsiao
Lorna Dunning
Max Kroon
Landon Myer
author_sort Nei-yuan Hsiao
title Laboratory Evaluation of the Alere q Point-of-Care System for Early Infant HIV Diagnosis.
title_short Laboratory Evaluation of the Alere q Point-of-Care System for Early Infant HIV Diagnosis.
title_full Laboratory Evaluation of the Alere q Point-of-Care System for Early Infant HIV Diagnosis.
title_fullStr Laboratory Evaluation of the Alere q Point-of-Care System for Early Infant HIV Diagnosis.
title_full_unstemmed Laboratory Evaluation of the Alere q Point-of-Care System for Early Infant HIV Diagnosis.
title_sort laboratory evaluation of the alere q point-of-care system for early infant hiv diagnosis.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2016-01-01
description INTRODUCTION:Early infant diagnosis (EID) and prompt linkage to care are critical to minimise the high morbidity and mortality associated with infant HIV infection. Attrition in the "EID cascade" is common; however, point-of-care (POC) EID assays with same-day result could facilitate prompt linkage of HIV-infected infant to treatment. Despite a number of POC EID assays in development, few have been independently evaluated and data on new technologies are urgently needed to inform policy. METHODS:We compared Alere q 1/2 Detect POC system laboratory test characteristics with the local standard of care (SOC), Roche CAP/CTM HIV-1 qualitative PCR in an independent laboratory-based evaluation in Cape Town, South Africa. Routinely EID samples collected between November 2013 and September 2014 were each tested by both SOC and POC systems. Repeat testing was done to troubleshoot any discrepancy between POC and SOC results. RESULTS:Overall, 1098 children with a median age of 47 days (IQR, 42-117) were included. Birth PCR (age <7 days) comprised of 8% (n = 92) tests while 56% (n = 620) of children tested as part of routine EID (ages 6-14 weeks). In the overall direct comparison, Alere q Detect achieved sensitivity of 95.5% (95% CI, 91.7-97.9%) and a specificity of 99.8% (95% CI, 99.1-100%). Following repeat testing of discordant samples and exclusion of any inconclusive results, the POC assay sensitivity and specificity were 96.9% (95% CI 93.4-98.9%) and 100% (lower 95% CI 98%) respectively. Among birth PCR tests the POC assay had slightly lower sensitivity (93.3% vs 96.5% in routine EID) and higher assay error rate (10% vs 5% in samples of older children, p = 0.04). CONCLUSION:Our results indicate this POC assay performs well for EID in the laboratory. The high specificity and thus high positive predictive value would suggest a positive POC result may be adequate for immediate infant ART initiation. While POC testing for EID may have particular utility for birth testing at delivery facilities, the lower sensitivity and error rate requires further attention, as does field implementation of POC EID technologies in other clinical care settings.
url http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC4816318?pdf=render
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