The diagnostic performance of the Visitect Advanced Disease point-of-care CD4 platform: a pragmatic mixed-methods multisite validation, costing, and qualitative analysis.
Elizabeth Nalintya, Preethiya Sekar, Olive L Namakula, Kiiza Kandole Tadeo, Richard Kwizera, Lucy Apeduno, Diana Rose Naluyima, Rachel Nanano, Lilian Mujungu, Alice Lehman, Tessa Adzemovic, Mathius Amperiize, Paul Kavuma, Viola Kasone, Ann Fieberg, Patricia Nerima, Biyue Dai, David B Meya, David R Boulware, Radha Rajasingham
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Background: The Visitect CD4 Advanced Disease test (AccuBio, Alva, United Kingdom) is a rapid, semi-quantitative assay that estimates CD4 results above or below 200 cells/μL. We evaluated the performance of the Visitect CD4 assay in semi-urban laboratories in Uganda.
Methods: We performed a pragmatic laboratory validation of the Visitect CD4 platform in four routine HIV clinics in Uganda, nested within a cluster randomized trial evaluating an enhanced package of screening and treatment for persons with advanced HIV disease (NCT05085171). As part of the clinical trial, samples processed on the Visitect CD4 platform were confirmed using another CD4 testing method. We compared the diagnostic performance of the Visitect CD4 platform against the confirmatory method by evaluating the sensitivity, specificity, positive and negative predictive values.
Results: Of 1495 venous blood samples that were processed both by the Visitect CD4 test and another confirmatory CD4 platform at clinics in Kampala, Uganda, specificity was 81% (95% CI, 79%-84%) and the positive predictive value was 69% (95% CI, 66%-73%). There were no samples for which the Visitect test was >200 cells/μL and the confirmatory test was ≤200 cells/μL, resulting in a sensitivity of 100%. Among Visitect CD4 tests that were read as <200 cells/μL with confirmatory results >200 cells/μL, the median confirmatory CD4 result was 397 (IQR, 281-590) cells/μL. Specificity varied by clinic ranging from 63% to 99%.
Conclusions: Given variable specificity of the Visitect CD4 Advanced Disease platform, successful implementation will require consideration of clinic context and laboratory staffing.
期刊介绍:
JAIDS: Journal of Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndromes seeks to end the HIV epidemic by presenting important new science across all disciplines that advance our understanding of the biology, treatment and prevention of HIV infection worldwide.
JAIDS: Journal of Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndromes is the trusted, interdisciplinary resource for HIV- and AIDS-related information with a strong focus on basic and translational science, clinical science, and epidemiology and prevention. Co-edited by the foremost leaders in clinical virology, molecular biology, and epidemiology, JAIDS publishes vital information on the advances in diagnosis and treatment of HIV infections, as well as the latest research in the development of therapeutics and vaccine approaches. This ground-breaking journal brings together rigorously peer-reviewed articles, reviews of current research, results of clinical trials, and epidemiologic reports from around the world.