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. 2017 Dec 20;12(12):e0189226.
doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0189226. eCollection 2017.

Field evaluation of HIV point-of-care testing for early infant diagnosis in Cape Town, South Africa

Affiliations

Field evaluation of HIV point-of-care testing for early infant diagnosis in Cape Town, South Africa

Lorna Dunning et al. PLoS One. .

Abstract

Background: Early infant HIV diagnosis (EID) coverage and uptake remains challenging. Point-of-care (POC) testing may improve access and turn-around-times, but, while several POC technologies are in development there are few data on their implementation in the field.

Methods: We conducted an implementation study of the Alere q Detect POC system for EID at two public sector health facilities in Cape Town. HIV-exposed neonates undergoing routine EID testing at a large maternity hospital and a primary care clinic received both laboratory-based HIV PCR testing per local protocols and a POC test. We analysed the performance of POC versus laboratory testing, and conducted semi-structured interviews with providers to assess acceptability and implementation issues.

Results: Overall 478 specimens were taken: 311 tests were performed at the obstetric hospital (median child age, 1 days) and 167 six-week tests in primary care (median child age, 42 days). 9.0% of all tests resulted in an error with no differences by site; most errors resolved with retesting. POC was more sensitive (100%; lower 95% CI, 39.8%) and specific (100%, lower 95% CI, 98%) among older children tested in primary care compared with birth testing in hospital (90.0%, 95% CI, 55.5-99.8% and 100.0%, lower 95% CI, 98.4%, respectively). Negative predictive value was high (>99%) at both sites. In interviews, providers felt the device was simple to use and facilitated decision-making in the management of infants. However, many wanted clarity on the cause of errors on the POC device to help guide repeat testing.

Conclusions: POC EID testing performs well in field implementation in health care facilities and appears highly acceptable to health care providers.

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Conflict of interest statement

Competing Interests: The authors have declared that no competing interests exist.

Figures

Fig 1
Fig 1. STARD diagnostic flow diagram.
Infants receiving an HIV PCR test as per local protocol were tested on the POC device and at the laboratory. Some infants provided multiple specimens and underwent multiple point-of-care tests. This diagram reflects the first point-of-care result for each specimen which is directly compared to the standard of care result from the laboratory. Tests are stratified by field testing site.

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