Elizabeth Glaser Pediatric AIDS Foundation, Washington, DC, USA.
Elizabeth Glaser Pediatric AIDS Foundation, Geneva, Switzerland.
Lancet HIV. 2019 Jun;6(6):e373-e381. doi: 10.1016/S2352-3018(19)30033-5. Epub 2019 Apr 12.
In 2017, there were 180 000 estimated new HIV infections in children aged 0-14 years. Without early diagnosis and treatment, half of infants with HIV die by age 2 years, with peak mortality around age 8-10 weeks. Conventional early infant diagnosis (EID) systems have not consistently returned results in a timely manner. However, point-of-care (POC) EID devices, which are new to market, could improve outcomes. In December, 2016, POC EID testing was introduced in eight sub-Saharan African countries as part of routine service delivery. We aimed to compare key service delivery and clinical outcomes and costs of POC versus conventional EID.
In our observational study, we compared service delivery and clinical outcomes in eight countries (Cameroon, Côte d'Ivoire, Kenya, Lesotho, Mozambique, Rwanda, Swaziland, and Zimbabwe), before and after a POC intervention was introduced for EID of HIV. For the baseline, pre-intervention sample, we sampled 30 consecutive tests for HIV-exposed infants who had a documented date of blood collection for EID within Ministry of Health registers in a subset of Elizabeth Glaser Pediatric AIDS Foundation (EGPAF)-supported sites that would be enrolled in POC. For the post-intervention sample, all infants who were tested with POC EID for HIV at an EGPAF site were included in the sample. For both conventional and POC EID testing, we did not specify an age range, but used national EID guidelines for EID eligibility. A range of sites for conventional data collection were selected to represent both primary testing sites (where POC EID instruments would be placed) and spoke sites, rural and urban environment, and high throughput and low throughput sites. In all countries, except Mozambique, we developed a POC EID test request form in conjunction with the Ministry of Health. In Mozambique, EGPAF-trained staff extracted data from health facility registers and other sources using a data collection form. Certain specific indicators were required for all countries, but countries could collect additional variables, as the POC EID test request form was used for patient management for the duration of the project. These forms were filled in by health-care providers at the facility. Once the form was completed it was collected by EGPAF staff and entered into a project-specific database. The cost per test result returned was approximated by use of the Global Fund's total cost of ownership estimates.
Retrospective collection of data on clinical and service delivery outcomes of conventional testing began on Nov 14, 2016, and was completed on Nov 26, 2017, for tests done between March 3, 2014, and March 30, 2017, at 96 health-care facilities using conventional testing. POC tests were done at 339 health-care facilities between Dec 1, 2016, and Dec 31, 2017. We evaluated data from 2875 infants exposed to HIV who were tested with conventional testing methods (2899 tests) and 18 220 infants tested with POC testing (19 071 tests). Several EID outcomes were significantly improved with POC testing relative to conventional testing. The return of results to caregivers within 30 days (in 18 737 [98·3%] of 19 058 infants receiving POC testing vs 542 [18·7%] of 2898 infants receiving conventional testing; p<0·0001), the median time from sample collection to return of results to caregivers (0 vs 55 days; p<0·0001), the number of infants with HIV initiating antiretroviral therapy (ART) within 60 days of sample collection (639 [92·3%] of 692 infants vs 42 [43·3%] of 97 infants; p<0·0001), the median time from sample collection to ART initiation among infants with HIV (0 vs 49 days; p<0·0001), and the median age at ART initiation among infants with HIV who were tested at 6-8 weeks (1·6 vs 3·3 months; p<0·0001) were all improved with POC testing compared with conventional testing. The cost per test result returned within 30 days was less for POC (US$27·24, range 21·39-33·10) than conventional testing ($131·02, 96·26-165·76).
POC EID improves the speed of return of HIV test results and enables earlier ART initiation; this approach could potentially reduce morbidity and mortality in infants with HIV. National programmes, funders, and implementing partners should consider POC EID as a preferred testing strategy for implementation.
Unitaid.
2017 年,估计有 18 万 0000 名 0-14 岁儿童感染艾滋病毒。如果不进行早期诊断和治疗,一半感染艾滋病毒的婴儿会在 2 岁前死亡,死亡高峰出现在 8-10 周左右。常规的早期婴儿诊断(EID)系统不能及时得到一致的结果。然而,新上市的即时检验(POC)设备可以改善结果。2016 年 12 月,POC EID 测试在八个撒哈拉以南非洲国家作为常规服务提供的一部分推出。我们旨在比较 POC 与常规 EID 的关键服务提供和临床结果及成本。
在我们的观察性研究中,我们比较了在 POC 引入 EID 之前和之后,八个国家(喀麦隆、科特迪瓦、肯尼亚、莱索托、莫桑比克、卢旺达、斯威士兰和津巴布韦)的服务提供和临床结果。对于基于卫生部门登记处的有记录的 EID 血液采集日期的 30 例连续艾滋病毒暴露婴儿的基线、干预前样本,我们在伊丽莎白格拉泽儿科艾滋病基金会(EGPAF)支持的、将纳入 POC 的部分地点,抽取了一个样本。对于干预后的样本,所有在 EGPAF 地点接受 POC EID 艾滋病毒检测的婴儿都包括在样本中。对于常规和 POC EID 检测,我们没有指定年龄范围,但使用了国家 EID 指南来确定 EID 的资格。为了常规数据收集,我们选择了一系列地点,代表了主要检测地点(POC EID 仪器将放置的地点)和说话地点、农村和城市环境以及高吞吐量和低吞吐量地点。除了莫桑比克,在所有国家,我们都与卫生部一起制定了 POC EID 测试请求表。在莫桑比克,EGPAF 培训的工作人员使用数据收集表从卫生保健机构登记处和其他来源提取数据。所有国家都需要特定的指标,但各国也可以收集其他变量,因为 POC EID 测试请求表在项目期间用于患者管理。这些表格由医疗机构的医疗保健提供者填写。表格填写完毕后,由 EGPAF 工作人员收集,并输入到一个特定于项目的数据库中。通过使用全球基金的总拥有成本估算来近似每个测试结果的成本。
常规检测的临床和服务提供结果的回顾性数据收集于 2016 年 11 月 14 日开始,于 2017 年 11 月 26 日完成,涉及 2014 年 3 月 3 日至 2017 年 3 月 30 日期间在 96 个卫生保健机构进行的常规检测,在 2016 年 12 月 1 日至 2017 年 12 月 31 日期间在 339 个卫生保健机构进行了 POC 检测。我们评估了 2875 名接受常规检测方法检测的艾滋病毒暴露婴儿的数据(2899 次检测)和 18 220 名接受 POC 检测的婴儿的数据(19 071 次检测)。与常规检测相比,几个 EID 结果都有显著改善。在 30 天内将结果反馈给照顾者(在接受 POC 检测的 19 058 名婴儿中,有 18 737 名[98.3%],在接受常规检测的 2898 名婴儿中,有 542 名[18.7%];p<0.0001)、从样本采集到将结果反馈给照顾者的中位数时间(0 与 55 天;p<0.0001)、在样本采集后 60 天内开始接受抗逆转录病毒治疗(ART)的婴儿数量(在接受 POC 检测的 692 名婴儿中,有 639 名[92.3%],在接受常规检测的 97 名婴儿中,有 42 名[43.3%];p<0.0001)、在样本采集后开始接受 ART 的 HIV 婴儿的中位数时间(0 与 49 天;p<0.0001)以及在 6-8 周接受检测的 HIV 婴儿开始接受 ART 的中位数年龄(1.6 与 3.3 个月;p<0.0001),这些都通过 POC 检测得到了改善,而不是常规检测。在 30 天内返回结果的 POC 检测成本(27.24 美元,范围 21.39-33.10)低于常规检测(131.02 美元,96.26-165.76 美元)。
POC EID 提高了 HIV 检测结果的返回速度,并使早期开始接受 ART;这种方法有可能降低艾滋病毒婴儿的发病率和死亡率。国家方案、供资者和实施伙伴应考虑将 POC EID 作为实施的首选检测策略。
联合国艾滋病规划署。