*Médecins Sans Frontières, Southern Africa Medical Unit, Cape Town, South Africa; †Médecins Sans Frontières, Thyolo, Malawi; ‡Ministry of Health, Health Technical Support Services, Diagnostics, District Management Office, Thyolo, Malawi; §Ministry of Health, Lilongwe, Malawi; ‖Médecins Sans Frontières, Operational Research Unit, Brussels, Belgium; and ¶Division of Medical Virology, Stellenbosch University, and National Health Laboratory Service, Tygerberg, South Africa.
J Acquir Immune Defic Syndr. 2013 Oct 1;64(2):134-7. doi: 10.1097/QAI.0b013e3182a61e63.
Rollout of routine HIV-1 viral load monitoring is hampered by high costs and logistical difficulties associated with sample collection and transport. New strategies are needed to overcome these constraints. Dried blood spots from finger pricks have been shown to be more practical than the use of plasma specimens, and pooling strategies using plasma specimens have been demonstrated to be an efficient method to reduce costs. This study found that combination of finger-prick dried blood spots and a pooling strategy is a feasible and efficient option to reduce costs, while maintaining accuracy in the context of a district hospital in Malawi.
常规 HIV-1 病毒载量监测的推广受到与样本采集和运输相关的高成本和后勤困难的阻碍。需要新的策略来克服这些限制。手指刺取的干血斑比使用血浆标本更实用,并且已经证明使用血浆标本进行合并策略是一种降低成本的有效方法。本研究发现,在马拉维的一家地区医院中,将手指刺取的干血斑与合并策略相结合是一种可行且有效的降低成本的选择,同时保持准确性。