HIV Infections Clinical Trial
Official title:
CIDRZ 1234 - Non-virologic Methods to Diagnose Treatment Eligibility in HIV-exposed Infants
This study is designed to develop and evaluate a set of non-virologic diagnostic algorithms to monitor HIV-exposed children of unknown infection status for treatment eligibility during the first year of life. The results of this cross sectional study are expected to be used in development of a series of non-virologic algorithms to determining treatment eligibility among HIV-exposed children in settings where polymerase chain reaction (PCR) testing is not available and to guide the judicious use of PCR testing among HIV-exposed children in settings where PCR is available. These results will directly inform program implementation in Zambia.
Despite recent scientific advances in prevention of mother-to-child transmission (PMTCT),
substantial donor investment, and national commitments to PMTCT program roll-out, pediatric
HIV/AIDS remains a largely uncontrolled epidemic. Unless some intervention is undertaken,
more than half of children who become HIV-infected will die by their second birthday. Yet in
sub-Saharan Africa, the majority of infected children die without ever having confirmation
of their HIV status, having never had the chance to begin life-saving antiretroviral therapy
(ART). Recognizing the need to provide children with greater access to care, the World
Health Organization (WHO) has advised countries that at least 10% of patients receiving ART
should be children. However, most programs fall well short of this target.
Unlike diagnosis in adults, definitive diagnosis of HIV in children less than 18 months of
age requires virologic testing. Maternal IgG antibodies cross the placenta into the fetal
circulation through pregnancy and are also secreted in breast milk. As infants may retain
these maternal antibodies for up to 18 months after birth, conventional HIV antibody tests
are of limited use in determining positive infection status. Instead it is necessary to
directly identify HIV infection using a virologic method, typically polymerase chain
reaction (PCR) testing to detect viral DNA or RNA.
PCR testing is expensive and, in most developing countries, available only through specialty
laboratories. Because PCR testing is more complex than other common HIV laboratory assays
(e.g. CD4+ cell counting), it requires technicians with considerably more training and
technical skill, involves longer sample preparation time, and can be considerably more
costly than other diagnostic tests. Thus, most countries with large populations of
HIV-infected children have extremely limited capacity to carry out PCR testing. Even where
PCR is available, pediatric HIV diagnosis may remain difficult in breastfeeding populations
because infants are at continued risk of infection until breastfeeding is completely
stopped. A negative PCR test during breastfeeding does not guarantee that the infant will
remain uninfected. The alternative - serial testing for HIV infection - would result in an
exponential increase in cost.
Indeed, a convincing argument can be made that rather than monitoring HIV-exposed
breastfeeding children for HIV infection, it may be more appropriate to simply monitor for
treatment eligibility, followed by a definitive antibody test at 15-18 months or a few
months after breastfeeding has stopped. Those children who meet criteria for treatment could
be commenced on ART; those who do not would continue to undergo periodic screening until
they were weaned and old enough to have a final (definitive) antibody test. For HIV-exposed
infants without access to HIV PCR testing - the vast majority in Africa - development of
such an algorithm would have the obvious benefit of providing reliable evaluation for
treatment eligibility in the first 18 months of life. Even in settings where HIV PCR testing
is available - but may be limited - the introduction of such algorithms could reduce the
volume of HIV PCR tests required at a programmatic level, and thus lead to substantial
cost-savings.
The overall goal of this protocol is to develop and evaluate a set of non-virologic
diagnostic algorithms that can be used to monitor HIV-exposed children of unknown infection
status for treatment eligibility during the first 12 weeks of life, with validation of our
model among HIV-exposed children up to 12 months of age. We will evaluate the performance of
different algorithms in two separate but common scenarios in Africa: (1) where infant PCR
testing is not available, and (2) where infant PCR may be available, but poorly accessible
due to cost and resource considerations. Although DNA PCR testing has become available in
Zambia, only three sites currently provide this type of testing and capacity may be limited
for country-wide screening. Our study was designed to determine HIV infection and
antiretroviral therapy (ART) eligibility using more commonly used "non-virologic" tests,
such as CD4, CD8, HIV antibody, total lymphocyte count, hemoglobin, and clinical staging.
Previous studies have demonstrated that these indicators by themselves do not perform well
in the absence of DNA PCR testing. In this exploratory study, we hypothesize that
combinations of these tests - in formalized algorithms - can yield high performance and be
used in rural settings where reliable DNA PCR services are not yet available or remain
limited.
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