Author:
Gawde Nilesh,Kamble Suchit,Goel Noopur,Nikhare Kalyani,Bembalkar Shilpa,Thorwat Mohan,Jagtap Dhanashree,Kurle Swarali,Yadav Neeru,Verma Vinita,Kapoor Neha,Das Chinmoyee
Abstract
Abstract
Background
Early Infant Diagnosis was launched in India in 2010 and its effect on the diagnosis of HIV-exposed infants needs to be assessed. The present study was done to find out the median age at DBS sample collection for early infant diagnosis and its trend over years, the median age at diagnosis of HIV among the HIV-exposed infants with DNA PCR tests, and the proportion of infants who completed testing cascades after detection of HIV-1 in a sample.
Methods
DNA PCR data (from 2013 to 2017) maintained at all regional reference laboratories in India was collated with each infant identified by a unique code. Cohort analysis of the infant data was used to find the median age at sample collection and diagnosis. The outcomes of testing in each cascade and the overall outcomes of testing for infants were prepared.
Results
The median age at sample collection for the four years combined at all India level was 60 days (48–110 days). The median age at diagnosis of HIV was 285 days (174–418 days). HIV-1 was detected in samples of 1897 (6.3%) infants out of 30,216 infants who had a DNA PCR test, out of whom 1070 (56.4%) completed the testing cascade and the rest were lost to follow-up.
Conclusion
The data highlights delay in diagnosis; both due to delay in sample collection and turn-around-times. Loss to follow-up of HIV-exposed infants with virus detection is a significant concern to the Early Infant Diagnosis and tracking systems need to be strengthened.
Funder
National AIDS Control Organisation
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC
Subject
Pediatrics, Perinatology and Child Health
Cited by
1 articles.
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