Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology, University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center, Dallas, TX.
Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology, University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center, Dallas, TX.
Am J Obstet Gynecol. 2018 Oct;219(4):408.e1-408.e9. doi: 10.1016/j.ajog.2018.06.008. Epub 2018 Jun 18.
False-positive HIV screening tests in pregnancy may lead to unnecessary interventions in labor. In 2014, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention released a new algorithm for HIV diagnosis using a fourth-generation screening test, which detects antibodies to HIV as well as p24 antigen and has a shorter window period compared with prior generations. A reactive screen requires a differentiation assay, and supplemental qualitative RNA testing is necessary for nonreactive differentiation assay. One screening test, the ARCHITECT Ag/Ab Combo assay, is described to have 100% sensitivity and >99% specificity in nonpregnant populations; however, its clinical performance in pregnancy has not been well described.
The objective of the study was to determine the performance of the ARCHITECT assay among pregnant women at a large county hospital and to assess whether the relative signal-to-cutoff ratio can be used to differentiate between false-positive vs confirmed HIV infections in women with a nonreactive differentiation assay.
This is a retrospective review of fourth-generation HIV testing in pregnant women at Parkland Hospital between June 1, 2015, and Jan. 31, 2017. We identified gravidas screened using the ARCHITECT Ag/Ab Combo assay (index test), with reflex to differentiation assay. Women with reactive ARCHITECT and nonreactive differentiation assay were evaluated with a qualitative RNA assay (reference standard). We calculated sensitivity, specificity, predictive value, and false-positive rate of the ARCHITECT screening assay in our population and described characteristics of women with false-positive HIV testing vs confirmed infection. Among women with a nonreactive differentiation assay, we compared interventions among women with and without a qualitative RNA assay result available at delivery and examined relative signal-to-cutoff ratios of the ARCHITECT assay in women with false-positive vs confirmed HIV infection.
A total of 21,163 pregnant women were screened using the ARCHITECT assay, and 190 tested positive. Of these, 33 of 190 (17%) women had false-positive HIV screening tests (28 deliveries available for analysis), and 157 of 190 (83%) had confirmed HIV-1 infection (140 available for analysis). Diagnostic accuracy of the ARCHITECT HIV Ag/Ab Combo assay in our prenatal population (with 95% confidence interval) was as follows: sensitivity, 100% (97.7-100%); specificity, 99.8% (99.8-99.9%); positive likelihood ratio, 636 (453-895); negative likelihood ratio, 0.0 (NA); positive predictive value, 83% (77-88%); and false positive rate, 0.16% (0.11-0.22%), with a prevalence of 7 per 1000. Women with false-positive HIV testing were younger and more likely of Hispanic ethnicity. A qualitative RNA assay (reference standard) was performed prenatally in 24 (86%) and quantitative viral load in 22 (92%). Interventions occurred more frequently in women without a qualitative RNA assay result available at delivery, including intrapartum zidovudine (75% vs 4%, P = .002), breastfeeding delay (75% vs 8%, P = .001), and neonatal zidovudine initiation (75% vs 4%, P = .002). The ARCHITECT signal-to-cutoff ratio was significantly lower for women with false-positive HIV tests compared with those with established HIV infection (1.89 [1.27, 2.73] vs 533.65 [391.12, 737.22], respectively, P < .001).
While the performance of the fourth-generation ARCHITECT HIV Ag/Ab Combo assay among pregnant women is comparable with that reported in nonpregnant populations, clinical implications of using a screening test with a positive predictive value of 83% in pregnancy are significant. When the qualitative RNA assay result is unavailable, absence of risk factors in combination with an ARCHITECT HIV Ag/Ab assay S/Co ratio <5 and nonreactive differentiation assay provide sufficient evidence to support deferral of unnecessary intrapartum interventions while awaiting qualitative RNA results.
妊娠时 HIV 筛查试验假阳性可能导致不必要的分娩干预。2014 年,美国疾病控制与预防中心发布了一种新的 HIV 诊断算法,该算法使用第四代筛查试验,该试验检测 HIV 抗体以及 p24 抗原,与前几代相比,窗口期更短。反应性筛查需要进行区分检测,对于非反应性区分检测,需要进行补充定性 RNA 检测。一种筛查试验,ARCHITECT Ag/Ab Combo 检测,在非妊娠人群中的灵敏度为 100%,特异性>99%;然而,其在妊娠中的临床性能尚未得到很好的描述。
本研究旨在确定在一家大型县医院孕妇中使用 ARCHITECT 检测的性能,并评估相对信号-截止比值是否可用于区分非反应性区分检测的假阳性与确诊 HIV 感染。
这是对 2015 年 6 月 1 日至 2017 年 1 月 31 日期间在 Parkland 医院进行的第四代 HIV 检测的孕妇进行的回顾性分析。我们鉴定了使用 ARCHITECT Ag/Ab Combo 检测(指标检测)进行筛查的孕妇,并进行了区分检测。ARCHITECT 检测阳性且区分检测非反应性的女性采用定性 RNA 检测(参考标准)进行评估。我们计算了我们人群中 ARCHITECT 筛查检测的灵敏度、特异性、预测值和假阳性率,并描述了 HIV 假阳性检测与确诊感染女性的特征。在非反应性区分检测的女性中,我们比较了有和没有分娩时可用的定性 RNA 检测结果的女性之间的干预措施,并比较了假阳性与确诊 HIV 感染女性的 ARCHITECT 检测相对信号-截止比值。
共有 21163 名孕妇接受了 ARCHITECT 检测,其中 190 人检测结果阳性。其中,33 名(17%)女性的 HIV 筛查试验呈假阳性(28 例分娩可供分析),157 名(83%)女性确诊为 HIV-1 感染(140 例可供分析)。在我们的产前人群中,ARCHITECT HIV Ag/Ab Combo 检测的诊断准确性(95%置信区间)如下:灵敏度,100%(97.7-100%);特异性,99.8%(99.8-99.9%);阳性似然比,636(453-895);阴性似然比,0.0(NA);阳性预测值,83%(77-88%);假阳性率,0.16%(0.11-0.22%),患病率为每 1000 例 7 例。HIV 假阳性检测的女性更年轻,且更可能为西班牙裔。24 名(86%)女性进行了产前定性 RNA 检测,22 名(92%)进行了定量病毒载量检测。在没有分娩时可用的定性 RNA 检测结果的女性中,干预措施更常见,包括产时齐多夫定(75%比 4%,P=0.002)、延迟母乳喂养(75%比 8%,P=0.001)和新生儿齐多夫定起始治疗(75%比 4%,P=0.002)。与确诊 HIV 感染的女性相比,假阳性 HIV 检测的女性的 ARCHITECT 信号-截止比值明显较低(1.89[1.27,2.73]比 533.65[391.12,737.22],P<0.001)。
尽管第四代 ARCHITECT HIV Ag/Ab Combo 检测在孕妇中的性能与非妊娠人群中的报告相似,但在妊娠中使用阳性预测值为 83%的筛查试验的临床意义是显著的。当定性 RNA 检测结果不可用时,不存在风险因素,结合 ARCHITECT HIV Ag/Ab 检测 S/Co 比值<5 和非反应性区分检测,可充分证明在等待定性 RNA 结果时,可推迟不必要的分娩干预措施。