Missed opportunities for HIV diagnosis: a three-year audit in the West of Scotland

Author:

Brawley D1,MacConnachie A2,Nandwani R3,Bell DJ2,Fargie F3,Fox R2,Peters E2,Seaton RA2,Winter A3

Affiliation:

1. Specialty Registrar in Genitourinary Medicine, NHS Greater Glasgow & Clyde, Brownlee Centre, Gartnavel General Hospital, UK

2. Consultant in Infectious Diseases, NHS Greater Glasgow & Clyde, Brownlee Centre, Gartnavel General Hospital, UK

3. Consultant in Sexual Health and HIV Medicine, NHS Greater Glasgow & Clyde, Brownlee Centre, Gartnavel General Hospital, UK

Abstract

Background National specialty guidelines for HIV testing aim to increase diagnosis and reduce late presentation. An audit of new HIV diagnoses in Glasgow was performed to assess local performance against these guidelines and estimate the proportion of patients presenting who had previous missed opportunities for diagnosis. Methods A retrospective case note review of 339 patients diagnosed from September 2008 to September 2011 was performed. Documented past medical history was assessed for HIV clinical indicator conditions prior to HIV diagnosis and prior review by medical services. Results Ninety (26%) individuals had at least one documented clinical indicator condition prior to HIV diagnosis, of whom 80 had prior contact with at least one speciality. This group also had a lower mean nadir CD4 count (258 cells/cmm versus 393 cells/cmm, p = <0.005) and were more likely to be severely immunocompromised at diagnosis, with a CD4 count below 50 cells/cmm (31% versus 9%, p = <0.005). AIDS-defining illnesses were also more common (31% versus 8%, p ≤ 0.005) as was HIV-related mortality ( p ≤ 0.005). Conclusion Additional support and training are required to increase adherence to HIV-testing guidelines within primary and secondary care in order to prevent ongoing late presentation with both individual clinical and public health implications.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

General Medicine

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