A new antigen-antibody Combo test could be useful for high-volume screening to identify individuals with acute HIV infection – such people might be missed by traditional HIV antibody tests.
A new antigen-antibody combo test could be useful for high-volume screening to identify individuals with acute HIV infection – such people might be missed by traditional HIV antibody tests.
Presenting research by Johns Hopkins University, Abbott and others at the 16th Conference on Retroviruses and Opportunistic Infections (CROI), John Hackett, from the Global HIV Surveillance Program at Abbott, said, "Those with recent HIV infections who have not yet developed an HIV antibody response are a major driver of the global HIV epidemic."The current method for detection of acute infections is expensive and labor-intensive pooled nucleic acid testing (NAAT). The combination assay represents a reliable and cost-effective alternative with important benefits for HIV prevention strategies."
Acute HIV infection, the early phase of infection when symptoms begin to emerge, cannot be detected by most routinely used serological HIV tests. Conventional HIV tests detect HIV-specific antibodies in blood or oral fluids that are produced by the immune system during seroconversion or the development of detectable antibodies, which occurs approximately 22 to 25 days after initial infection. Therefore, a person infected very recently may receive an HIV-negative result using conventional HIV tests.
Testing for the antigen reduces the "window period" in which an individual may have been exposed to HIV and have a reactive test result. This means that individuals exposed to HIV may test reactive for the antigen, but may not test reactive to the antibody.
In the study by Johns Hopkins and Abbott, blood samples were collected every six months from men who have sex with men (MSM) participating in the U.S.
The men were HIV antibody negative at enrollment in the study. The previous seronegative specimens from patients who subsequently tested HIV antibody positive were tested individually with two different HIV RNA assays. Those determined positive by both methods were classified as acute infections. The specimens were then tested with the Abbott ARCHITECT® HIV Ag/Ab (antigen/antibody) Combo assay and two third-generation HIV antibody tests.
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"The HIV Combo assay detected nearly two-thirds of early, acute HIV infections in a high-risk population, suggesting that this test can be useful for high-volume public health outreach screening to identify acute HIV infections," Hackett said.
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Sixteen of the 36 samples that tested negative for HIV antibodies and positive with the RNA test were then tested with the Abbott HIV Ag/Ab Combo assay. Of the 16 RNA-positive samples, 15 (94 percent) were detected by the Abbott HIV/Ab Combo assay. "This study indicates that the HIV antigen-antibody combination assay could be an effective alternative to NAAT for identifying acute HIV infections," Hackett said.
The Abbott ARCHITECT® HIV Ag/Ab Combo assay is currently in development and not available in the United States, but used in Europe.
Abbott is a global leader in in vitro diagnostics and offers a broad range of innovative instrument systems and tests for hospitals, reference labs, molecular labs, blood banks, physician offices and clinics. With more than 65,000 institutional customers in more than 100 countries, The company employs approximately 69,000 people and markets its products in more than 130 countries.
Source-Medindia
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