hiv testing in 2013 – new tests, new questions, few answers sheldon campbell m.d., ph.d

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HIV Testing in 2013 – New Tests, New Questions, Few Answers Sheldon Campbell M.D., Ph.D.

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Page 1: HIV Testing in 2013 – New Tests, New Questions, Few Answers Sheldon Campbell M.D., Ph.D

HIV Testing in 2013 – New Tests, New Questions, Few Answers

Sheldon Campbell M.D., Ph.D.

Page 2: HIV Testing in 2013 – New Tests, New Questions, Few Answers Sheldon Campbell M.D., Ph.D

Overview

• HIV Epidemiology in the US and the Islamic World

• Diagnosing HIV: Traditional and Current Test Formats

• Managing Evolving Tests: Models and Algorithms for HIV Testing

• A Practical Example; VA New England Healthcare HIV Testing

Page 3: HIV Testing in 2013 – New Tests, New Questions, Few Answers Sheldon Campbell M.D., Ph.D

HIV Infections Continue to OccurCDC Data

Page 4: HIV Testing in 2013 – New Tests, New Questions, Few Answers Sheldon Campbell M.D., Ph.D

HIV in the Islamic World

• Low Prevalence Overall• UNAIDS 2011 data indicates that the Middle East / North

African region is one of the two with the fastest-growing AIDS epidemic.

• I chose a few countries from this WHO-defined region as examples, trying for variations in size, location, wealth, civil stability, and presence of outsiders; each nation in the region, and different regions within a nation, do vary:– Jordan– Iran– Morocco– UAE– Afghanistan

Page 5: HIV Testing in 2013 – New Tests, New Questions, Few Answers Sheldon Campbell M.D., Ph.D

HIV in Jordan• Low Prevalence

– Total HIV positive cases (1986-2011): 847 (29% Jordanians and 71% foreigners)

– Total HIV positive cases registered in 2010 and 2011 is 36 (78% males and 22% females)

– By December, 2011, 99 Jordanian PLHIV had died of AIDS.

– 56% of transmission is heterosexual.

• Risks– Youth: 57% of population <30y/o– Non-Jordanian workers 13.1% of workforce;

many Jordanian men work outside the country. – Women vulnerable in male-dominated

workplaces. – Stigma related to HIV diagnosis, and some legal

restrictions, are disincentives to case-finding. • Data are likely very incomplete.

Page 6: HIV Testing in 2013 – New Tests, New Questions, Few Answers Sheldon Campbell M.D., Ph.D

HIV in Iran• In the ‘concentrated’ phase; with high

prevalence in vulnerable populations. – 15% of IDU are infected.– Prevalence of 4.5% in female sex workers.

• 23,497 PLWH identified in Iran by September 21, 2011– 91.3% men and 8.7% women– 3168 have AIDS, 4419 dead– 46.4% are in the 25-34 age range– Models of detection and prevalence suggest

that this is <1/3 of the real number.

• Decrease in newly-identified cases may reflect limitations of case-finding mechanisms rather than actual decrease in transmission.

Page 7: HIV Testing in 2013 – New Tests, New Questions, Few Answers Sheldon Campbell M.D., Ph.D

HIV in Morocco (I Don’t Read French!)

• By December 2011, 6453 cases– 4169 with AIDS, 2284

asymptomatic HIV– 65% identified 2005-2011.– 71% between 25 and 44y/o.– Roughly 50% women.

• Complex modes of spread

Page 8: HIV Testing in 2013 – New Tests, New Questions, Few Answers Sheldon Campbell M.D., Ph.D

HIV in the UAE• 1980s till the end of 2011

cumulative total of 726 HIV still-alive cases– 2010-2011 93 new HIV cases

reported among UAE nationals– No estimates in high-risk groups

• Risks– massive labour migration– influx of tourists– changing sexual norms and

practices among young people

• "Those who suspect they may have been exposed to HIV – e.g. through sexual relationships or injecting drug use – may avoid the existing screening programmes."

Page 9: HIV Testing in 2013 – New Tests, New Questions, Few Answers Sheldon Campbell M.D., Ph.D

HIV in Afghanistan• High risk due to:

– 30y of armed conflicts. – Displaced populations. – Poppy cultivation and injection drug use. – Unsafe blood supply and injection

practices.

• Challenges– Security and economic problems. – Lack of infrastructure. – High stigma

• Prevalence data scarce to non-existent.

• Likely high levels in IDU and other high-risk populations.

• Struggling to develop effective responses.

Page 10: HIV Testing in 2013 – New Tests, New Questions, Few Answers Sheldon Campbell M.D., Ph.D

Assessment

• HIV is underdiagnosed in the WHO North African-Middle East region; this is not unique; HIV is underdiagnosed everywhere.

• In general, knowledge of HIV transmission and prevention is limited.

• The potential for continued and increased spread is present.

• Diagnostic capacity is essential to limit new infections.

• That would be us.

Page 11: HIV Testing in 2013 – New Tests, New Questions, Few Answers Sheldon Campbell M.D., Ph.D

ART prevents HIV

Page 12: HIV Testing in 2013 – New Tests, New Questions, Few Answers Sheldon Campbell M.D., Ph.D

Treatment=Prevention

• Effect of early vs. delayed treatment on transmission of HIV to partners

Prevention of HIV-1 Infection with Early Antiretroviral Therapy. N Engl J Med 2011; 365:493-505 August 11, 2011

Page 13: HIV Testing in 2013 – New Tests, New Questions, Few Answers Sheldon Campbell M.D., Ph.D

HIV in the US

• According to CDC, 1.2 million people in the United States are living with HIV infection and 1 in 5 are unaware of their infection.

• Current recommendations (2009-onward) are to broadly expand HIV testing to try and test everyone at risk, even without clinical suspicion.

Page 14: HIV Testing in 2013 – New Tests, New Questions, Few Answers Sheldon Campbell M.D., Ph.D

Current diagnostic algorithms for HIV infection

• Diagnosis of HIV infection is still primarily serological; detecting HIV antibodies.

• As with all laboratory tests, false-positive and false-negative tests occur. The usual pre-analytical causes, plus:

• False-negatives– Hypogammaglobulinemia, immunosuppression, – ‘Window period’; varies with assay– Unusual viral types

• HIV-2• Unusual types of HIV-1

– Improved Technology• False-positives

– Cross-reacting antibodies• Pregnancy, multiple transfusions, hypergammaglobulinemia, hemodialysis, autoantibodies

associated with autoimmune disease, recent vaccinations and viral infections– Confirmatory Testing

Page 15: HIV Testing in 2013 – New Tests, New Questions, Few Answers Sheldon Campbell M.D., Ph.D

Timing of Diagnostic Events in HIV Infection

From Branson B: J Acquir Immune Defic Syndr 2010;55:S102–S105

Page 16: HIV Testing in 2013 – New Tests, New Questions, Few Answers Sheldon Campbell M.D., Ph.D

The Standard Algorithm

From Griffith, BP, Campbell S and Mayo, DR (2007) ‘Human Immunodeficiency Viruses’ in Murray PR et al (eds) Manual of Clinical Microbiology, 9th Edition

Page 17: HIV Testing in 2013 – New Tests, New Questions, Few Answers Sheldon Campbell M.D., Ph.D

The ‘Generations’ of HIV Screening Tests

• 1st Generation: viral lysates• 2nd Generation: recombinant antigens, ↑ specificity

– As recently as 2006, 70% of public health labs used 1st or 2nd gen assays.

• 3rd Generation: recombinant antigens, sandwich format with improved IgM detection, ↑ sensitivity in early infection.

• 4th Generation: includes antigen detection capability for even earlier detection– Abbot 4th-gen test recently approved in US, but available

in EU x years; others submitted

Page 18: HIV Testing in 2013 – New Tests, New Questions, Few Answers Sheldon Campbell M.D., Ph.D

Screening Test Formats

• Plate or tube EIA– Semi-automated; being phased out.

• Automated chemiluminescent tests– 3rd or 4th generation; highly automated on random-

access immunochemical systems. • Rapid / Point-of-care tests

– Typically perform like 2nd or 3rd gen assays.– Rapid 4th gen tests newly introduced.

Page 19: HIV Testing in 2013 – New Tests, New Questions, Few Answers Sheldon Campbell M.D., Ph.D

HIV Confirmatory Tests

• FDA-approved– Western blot– IFA (rarely used, but still done by a few labs)– Bio-Rad Multispot: a rapid flow-through assay that

differentiates HIV-1 and HIV-2. – GenProbe HIV RNA

• Not FDA-approved– HIV viral load assays used for management

Page 20: HIV Testing in 2013 – New Tests, New Questions, Few Answers Sheldon Campbell M.D., Ph.D

Western Blot• HIV culture lysate gel → membrane• Subjective; CDC interpretive criteria

require reactivity to 2/3 of the gp120/160, gp41, and p24 antigens.

• Indeterminate results vary by population tested– Evolving reactions, HIV-2 infection,

other viral infections– 6% of Western blots performed at VA

CT since 2007• Insensitive in window period relative

to current screening tests• Not automated, labor-intensive.

Page 21: HIV Testing in 2013 – New Tests, New Questions, Few Answers Sheldon Campbell M.D., Ph.D

Bio-Rad Multispot

• Discriminatory test for HIV-1 and HIV-2

• Rapid; simple, though not automated

• Unclear how much specificity it adds apart from detection of (currently very rare) HIV-2 infection.

Control spot

HIV-2 Spot

HIV-1 Spots

Page 22: HIV Testing in 2013 – New Tests, New Questions, Few Answers Sheldon Campbell M.D., Ph.D

Gen-Probe HIV RNA

• Qualitative test for detection of HIV RNA. • TMA amplification, chemiluminescent detection• Not used for viral load testing, so in a routine lab

would only be used for HIV confirm. Uneconomical for most labs. – Sensitive down to 33 IU/ml– Positive median 12d sooner than HIV-1 Ab and 6d sooner

than HIV-1 Ag on seroconversion panels. • Concern: do automated serology instruments have

molecular carryover problems? – Unknown. Separate sample needed for confirmation?

Page 23: HIV Testing in 2013 – New Tests, New Questions, Few Answers Sheldon Campbell M.D., Ph.D

Other HIV Viral Load Tests

• Not FDA-approved for diagnostic use. – Extensive validation would be required. – Reimbursement?

• Optimized for very-low-end sensitivity; not well-studied for confirmatory use. – Borderline (e.g. ‘detected <48 copies/ml’) results

very frequent in HIV-infected patients on HAART; unclear how many would occur in screening environment, and what they’d mean.

Page 24: HIV Testing in 2013 – New Tests, New Questions, Few Answers Sheldon Campbell M.D., Ph.D

Relationship of Confirmatory Methods to Window Period

From Branson B: J Acquir Immune Defic Syndr 2010;55:S102–S105; highlights added

Page 25: HIV Testing in 2013 – New Tests, New Questions, Few Answers Sheldon Campbell M.D., Ph.D

Proposed Algorithms

• Sources– CDC / APHL– CLSI

• Types– Lab-Based vs Rapid– Based on Different Screening Tests (e.g. 4th gen vs

others)– Population/Patient-Based (Risk level, acute HIV)– Generate different levels of diagnostic certainty– Require various resources

Page 26: HIV Testing in 2013 – New Tests, New Questions, Few Answers Sheldon Campbell M.D., Ph.D

Proposed Algorithm – CDC/APHL• Primary test with 4th Gen

Assay• Confirm (with Multispot)

to differentiate HIV-1 and HIV-2

• Refer positives to care (with viral load)– Accept possible non-

specificity, treating entire serological process as a screening test.

• Low volume of RNA tests; few labs can maintain this.

• Sensitive for acute HIV infection.

From Branson B: J Acquir Immune Defic Syndr 2010;55:S102–S105

Page 27: HIV Testing in 2013 – New Tests, New Questions, Few Answers Sheldon Campbell M.D., Ph.D

CLSI Lab-based Algorithms

• From M-53-A: Criteria for Laboratory Testing and Diagnosis of Human Immunodeficiency Virus Infection

• Algorithm 1: Single Initial 4th-Gen Assay• Algorithm 2: Initial HIV-1/2 Antibody Assay with

Additional HIV-1 tests• Algorithm 3: Sequential HIV Ab Assay for Presumptive

Diagnosis• Algorithm 4, 5: 4=Oral-fluid confirmatory test; 5 begins

with an HIV-1 Ag/Ab discriminatory test; no US-approved versions

• Algorithm 6: Algorithm for Acute HIV Infection

Page 28: HIV Testing in 2013 – New Tests, New Questions, Few Answers Sheldon Campbell M.D., Ph.D

CLSI 1

• Essentially equivalent to the CDC/APHL algorithm.

Page 29: HIV Testing in 2013 – New Tests, New Questions, Few Answers Sheldon Campbell M.D., Ph.D

CLSI 2

• The standard/current algorithm, but allowing for use of NAT as a confirmatory test.

Page 30: HIV Testing in 2013 – New Tests, New Questions, Few Answers Sheldon Campbell M.D., Ph.D

CLSI 3• An even more radical

version of the CDC/APHL algorithm; uses a second EIA/CIA as a confirmatory test instead of the Multispot.

• Produces a presumptive positive result. – Why doesn’t Algorithm

1 do the same?• Analogous to

suggested multiple-rapid-test algorithms.

Page 31: HIV Testing in 2013 – New Tests, New Questions, Few Answers Sheldon Campbell M.D., Ph.D

CLSI 6• Specifically aimed at acute HIV

infection; college students, active drug-use communities.

• Individual or pooled NAT used on seronegative samples.

• Extremely expensive if pooled testing not used. – Ag/Ab combination assays

detect ~85% of Ab-negative, NAT-positive specimens during acute infection.

– Positive NAT should be repeated for confirmation if a low level of viral RNA (<5000 copies) is detected.

Page 32: HIV Testing in 2013 – New Tests, New Questions, Few Answers Sheldon Campbell M.D., Ph.D

A Practical Example: HIV Testing in VA VISN 1

• VISN 1 includes all the New England facilities• 11 Major facilities with labs

– West Haven and Newington (CT), Northampton, West Roxbury, Jamaica Plain, Bedford, Broxton (MA), Providence (RI), White River Junction (VT), Manchester (NH), Togus (ME)

– Virology testing, including HIV serology, has been centralized to Virology Reference Lab in West Haven for many years.

Page 33: HIV Testing in 2013 – New Tests, New Questions, Few Answers Sheldon Campbell M.D., Ph.D

Mandated HIV Screening

• In early 2010, VA Central Office mandated routine HIV testing for all VA patients, reflecting the 2009 CDC recommendations.

• Reinforced by automated clinicial reminders via the VA CPRS EMR system.

Page 34: HIV Testing in 2013 – New Tests, New Questions, Few Answers Sheldon Campbell M.D., Ph.D

Impact 2010

Jan FebMarAprMayJun Jul AugSep OctNovDec0

500

1000

1500

2000

2500

3000

0

2

4

6

8

10

12

14

16

# CIA Positive # WB PositiveHIV CIA Volume

• Nearly a 6-fold increase in HIV screening volume.

• A lesser increase in screen-positive samples– As expected

screening lower-risk persons

• Hard to say if more cases being found.

• Continued into early 2011

Page 35: HIV Testing in 2013 – New Tests, New Questions, Few Answers Sheldon Campbell M.D., Ph.D

A Change In Testing Models

• VISN 1 clinical laboratories do major instrument acquisitions as a network.

• In 2010-11 the general and immunochemistry systems went to bid, and Abbot got the contract.

• Facilities sending hundreds of HCV and HIV tests/week to West Haven said (roughly):

‘forget all the packing and shipping and tracking, we’re bringing this in-house’

Page 36: HIV Testing in 2013 – New Tests, New Questions, Few Answers Sheldon Campbell M.D., Ph.D

Decentralized Testing

• VISN moved from centralized testing for HIV on Ortho Eci (3rd generation) to dispersed testing on Abbot Architect (4th generation).

• Western blot and HIV viral load testing still done at VA CT VRL.

• How to confirm positive screens?

Page 37: HIV Testing in 2013 – New Tests, New Questions, Few Answers Sheldon Campbell M.D., Ph.D

Options

• Have everyone do Multispot locally (algorithm 1)– Major validation headache. Very small number of tests in each

facility. • Implement a NAT confirmation assay

– Very small volume for Genprobe; tremendous validation problem on another method.

– Need for second specimen on hundreds of negatives for each positive, or validation of carryover from screening instruments.

• Maintain near-status-quo (algorithm 2). – Send positives to WH for Western blot; if positive, call HIV

positive, if negative request additional specimen for NAT. • Discuss!! VISN 1 certainly did.

Page 38: HIV Testing in 2013 – New Tests, New Questions, Few Answers Sheldon Campbell M.D., Ph.D

VISN 1 Algorithm

Impressive VRL Newsletter courtesy Dr. David Peaper

Page 39: HIV Testing in 2013 – New Tests, New Questions, Few Answers Sheldon Campbell M.D., Ph.D

Result interpretations

Page 40: HIV Testing in 2013 – New Tests, New Questions, Few Answers Sheldon Campbell M.D., Ph.D

Comments on Ab/Ag screen results

• Still evaluating algorithm (essentially a variant of CLSI algorithm #2). – How often will HIV VL be ordered in a reasonable time-frame? – Use of S/CO ratio to optimize algorithms?

• Compromise between sensitivity, over-calling positivity, and laboratory practicality.

Page 41: HIV Testing in 2013 – New Tests, New Questions, Few Answers Sheldon Campbell M.D., Ph.D

Impact 2011

Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec0

500

1000

1500

2000

2500

3000

3500

4000

4500

0

5

10

15

20

25

30

35

HIV WB WB Pos HIV CIA Tests

Page 42: HIV Testing in 2013 – New Tests, New Questions, Few Answers Sheldon Campbell M.D., Ph.D

Current European Practice – After Years w/ 4th Gen Assays

You’d think that with years of experience with 4th gen assays this would’ve been worked out. But no.

Page 43: HIV Testing in 2013 – New Tests, New Questions, Few Answers Sheldon Campbell M.D., Ph.D

Lessons

• To prevent HIV, you have to look for it and treat it.

• You (and your ordering providers) must know the properties of your screening test.

• When testing low-incidence populations, confirmatory testing is essential; be aware of the properties of your confirmatory tests as well.

Page 44: HIV Testing in 2013 – New Tests, New Questions, Few Answers Sheldon Campbell M.D., Ph.D

Acknowledgements

• Background: Four Horsemen of Apocalypse, by Viktor Vasnetsov. Painted in 1887. From left to right, they are Death/Plague on the pale horse, Famine on the black, War on the red, and a rider whose identity is unclear in the Revelation text on the white.

• VA Algorithm and much collegial discussion provided by Dr. David Peaper.

• The staff of the VA CT Virology Reference Laboratory.

Page 45: HIV Testing in 2013 – New Tests, New Questions, Few Answers Sheldon Campbell M.D., Ph.D
Page 46: HIV Testing in 2013 – New Tests, New Questions, Few Answers Sheldon Campbell M.D., Ph.D

Transmembrane Envglycoprotein (gp41)

Surface Envglycoprotein (gp120)

Matrix protein (p17)

Lipid membrane

Capsid protein (p24)

Protease (p11)

Viral single-strandedRNA genome

Nucleocapsid protein (p7)

Reverse transcriptase (p66/p51)

Integrase (p32)

Page 47: HIV Testing in 2013 – New Tests, New Questions, Few Answers Sheldon Campbell M.D., Ph.D

HIV in Oman• 1984-2011, 2,164 Omani HIV

cases reported– 1,371 (63.4%) still alive at the end

of 2011– 72.2% males, 28.8 percent

females

• Routes of transmission– heterosexual 50.2%– homosexual or bisexual 14.1%– mother to child 5.5%– injecting drug users 4.2%– blood transfusion 3.3%.

• July 2009 HIV screening offered for all pregnant women (near 100% implementation).

• No VCT services; limited access to at-risk groups.