Field performance and cost‐effectiveness of a point‐of‐care triage test for HIV virological failure in Southern Africa

Author:

Saura‐Lázaro Anna1ORCID,Bock Peter2ORCID,Bogaart Erika van den3,van Vliet Jessie3,Granés Laura4,Nel Kerry2,Naidoo Vikesh2,Scheepers Michelle2,Saunders Yvonne2,Leal Núria1,Ramponi Francesco1,Paulussen René3,de Wit Tobias Rinke56,Naniche Denise1,López‐Varela Elisa1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Barcelona Institute for Global Health (ISGlobal) Hospital Clínic ‐ Universitat de Barcelona Barcelona Spain

2. Department of Pediatrics and Child Health Desmond Tutu TB Centre Faculty of Medicine and Health Sciences Stellenbosch University Cape Town South Africa

3. Mondial Diagnostics Amsterdam The Netherlands

4. Department of Preventive Medicine and Epidemiology Hospital Clínic de Barcelona Barcelona Spain

5. Amsterdam Institute for Global Health and Development (AIGHD) Amsterdam The Netherlands

6. Department of Global Health Amsterdam University Medical Center (UMC), University of Amsterdam Amsterdam The Netherlands

Abstract

AbstractIntroductionAntiretroviral therapy (ART) monitoring using viral load (VL) testing is challenging in high‐burden, limited‐resources settings. Chemokine IP‐10 (interferon gamma‐induced protein 10) strongly correlates with human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) VL. Its determination could serve to predict virological failure (VF) and to triage patients requiring VL testing. We assessed the field performance of a semi‐quantitative IP‐10 lateral flow assay (LFA) for VF screening in South Africa, and the cost‐effectiveness of its implementation in Mozambique.MethodsA cross‐sectional study was conducted between June and December 2021 in three primary health clinics in the Western Cape. Finger prick capillary blood was collected from adults on ART for ≥1 year for direct application onto the IP‐10 LFA (index test) and compared with a plasma VL result ≤1 month prior (reference test). We estimated the area under the receiver operating characteristic curves (AUC), sensitivity and specificity, to evaluate IP‐10 LFA prediction of VF (VL>1000 copies/ml). A decision tree model was used to investigate the cost‐effectiveness of integrating IP‐10 LFA combined with VL testing into the current Mozambican ART monitoring strategy. Averted disability‐adjusted life years (DALYs) and HIV acquisitions, and incremental cost‐effectiveness ratios were estimated.ResultsAmong 209 participants (median age 38 years and 84% female), 18% had VF. Median IP‐10 LFA values were higher among individuals with VF compared to those without (24.0 vs. 14.6; p<0.001). The IP‐10 LFA predicted VF with an AUC = 0.76 (95% confidence interval (CI) 0.67–0.85), 91.9% sensitivity (95% CI 78.1–98.3) and 35.1% specificity (95% CI 28.0–42.7). Integrating the IP‐10 LFA in a setting with 20% VF prevalence and 61% VL testing coverage could save 13.0% of costs and avert 14.9% of DALYs and 55.7% new HIV acquisitions. Furthermore, its introduction was estimated to reduce the total number of routine VL tests required for ART monitoring by up to 68%.ConclusionsThe IP‐10 LFA is an effective VF triage test for routine ART monitoring. Combining a highly sensitive, low‐cost IP‐10 LFA‐based screening with targeted VL confirmatory testing could result in significant healthcare quality improvements and cost savings in settings with limited access to VL testing.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Infectious Diseases,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health

Reference44 articles.

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