Sensitivity and Specificity of Rapid Diagnostic Tests for Hepatitis C Virus With or Without HIV Coinfection: A Multicentre Laboratory Evaluation Study

Author:

Vetter Beatrice N1,Reipold Elena Ivanova1,Ongarello Stefano1,Audu Rosemary2,Ige Fehintola A2,Alkhazashvili Maia3,Chitadze Nazibrola3,Vanroye Fien4,De Weggheleire Anja4,An Sokkab5,Fransen Katrien4

Affiliation:

1. Foundation for Innovative New Diagnostics, Geneva, Switzerland

2. Nigerian Institute of Medical Research, Lagos, Nigeria

3. National Center for Disease Control and Public Health/R. Lugar Center for Public Health Research, Tbilisi, Georgia

4. Institute of Tropical Medicine HIV/STD Reference Laboratory, Antwerp, Belgium

5. Sihanouk Hospital Center of Hope, Phnom Penh, Cambodia

Abstract

Abstract Background Hepatitis C virus (HCV) screening is critical to HCV elimination efforts. Simplified diagnostics are required for low-resource settings and difficult-to-reach populations. This retrospective study assessed performance of rapid diagnostic tests (RDTs) for detection of HCV antibodies. Methods Two lots of 13 RDTs were evaluated at 3 laboratories using archived plasma samples from 4 countries (Nigeria, Georgia, Cambodia, and Belgium). HCV status was determined using 3 reference tests according to a composite algorithm. Sensitivity and specificity were evaluated in HIV-infected and HIV-uninfected populations. Operational characteristics were also assessed. Results In total, 1710 samples met inclusion criteria. In HIV-uninfected samples (n = 384), the majority of RDTs had sensitivity ≥98% in 1 or both lots and most RDTs had specificity ≥99%. In HIV-infected samples (n = 264), specificity remained high but sensitivity was markedly lower than in HIV-uninfected samples; only 1 RDT reached >95%. The majority of HIV-infected samples for which sensitivity was low did not have detectable HCV viral load/core antigen. Interreader variability, lot-to-lot variability, and rate of invalid runs were low for all RDTs (<2%). Conclusions HCV RDTs should be evaluated in the intended target population, as sensitivity can be impacted by population factors such as HIV status. Clinical Trials Registration NCT04033887

Funder

Unitaid HCV

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Infectious Diseases,Immunology and Allergy

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