HIV birth testing and linkage to care for HIV-infected infants

: On 5-6 May 2016, the division of AIDS of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases convened a workshop on 'HIV Birth Testing and Linkage to Care for HIV Infected Infants.' The goal of the workshop was to evaluate birth testing for early infant diagnosis (EID) of HIV, deli...

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Veröffentlicht in:AIDS (London) 2017-08, Vol.31 (13), p.1797-1807
Hauptverfasser: Jean-Philippe, Patrick, Spiegel, Hans, Gnanashanmugam, Devasena, Fitzgibbon, Joseph, DʼSouza, Patricia, Crawford, Keith W, Jayashankar, Lakshmi, Bacon, Melanie C, Essajee, Shaffiq M, Aldrovandi, Grace M, Cotton, Mark, Abrams, Elaine J
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container_end_page 1807
container_issue 13
container_start_page 1797
container_title AIDS (London)
container_volume 31
creator Jean-Philippe, Patrick
Spiegel, Hans
Gnanashanmugam, Devasena
Fitzgibbon, Joseph
DʼSouza, Patricia
Crawford, Keith W
Jayashankar, Lakshmi
Bacon, Melanie C
Essajee, Shaffiq M
Aldrovandi, Grace M
Cotton, Mark
Abrams, Elaine J
description : On 5-6 May 2016, the division of AIDS of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases convened a workshop on 'HIV Birth Testing and Linkage to Care for HIV Infected Infants.' The goal of the workshop was to evaluate birth testing for early infant diagnosis (EID) of HIV, delineate technological resources for advancing a point-of-care (POC) HIV test implementable at birth and chart out the implementation hurdles for initiating early antiretroviral therapy to HIV-infected infants diagnosed at birth. The workshop addressed research and regulatory needs involved in the optimization of POC EID testing and challenges associated with implementation of EID, focusing on testing at birth. Scientific gaps and areas of intervention to accelerate and scale-up EID initiatives and birth testing were identified. These include discussion of the evidence supporting an early mortality peak among HIV-infected infant and justifying a role for birth HIV testing, including POC testing; evaluation of the current POC EID technology pipeline and test performance characteristics required for effective programmatic uptake; mathematical modeling of different testing scenarios and solutions with inclusion of birth testing; the adoption of setting-specific EID testing algorithms to achieve efficient linkage to care including early antiretroviral therapy initiation; the development of appropriate quality assurance programs to ensure accuracy of test results and enable sustainability of the testing program. Addressing these gaps and answering these challenges will be important in helping improve outcomes for HIV-infected infants and accelerate achieving the Joint United Nations Program for HIV and AIDS 90-90-90 targets in children.
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These include discussion of the evidence supporting an early mortality peak among HIV-infected infant and justifying a role for birth HIV testing, including POC testing; evaluation of the current POC EID technology pipeline and test performance characteristics required for effective programmatic uptake; mathematical modeling of different testing scenarios and solutions with inclusion of birth testing; the adoption of setting-specific EID testing algorithms to achieve efficient linkage to care including early antiretroviral therapy initiation; the development of appropriate quality assurance programs to ensure accuracy of test results and enable sustainability of the testing program. 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source MEDLINE; EZB Electronic Journals Library; Journals@Ovid Complete
subjects AIDS/HIV
Early Diagnosis
Health Policy
Health Services Administration
HIV Infections - diagnosis
Humans
Infant
Infant, Newborn
Mass Screening - methods
National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (U.S.)
Point-of-Care Testing
Postnatal Care - methods
United Nations
United States
title HIV birth testing and linkage to care for HIV-infected infants
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