HIV Surveillance in a Large, Community-Based Study: Results from the Pilot Study of Project Accept (HIV Prevention Trials Network 043)

Background: Project Accept is a community randomized, controlled trial to evaluate the efficacy of community mobilization, mobile testing, same-day results, and post-test support for the prevention of HIV infection in Thailand, Tanzania, Zimbabwe, and South Africa. We evaluated the accuracy of in-co...

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Main Authors: Estelle Piwowar-Manning, Agnes Fiamma, Oliver Laeyendecker, Michal Kulich, Deborah Donnell, Greg Szekeres, Laura Robins-Morris, Caroline E. Mullis, Ana Vallari, John Hackett, Timothy D. Mastro, Glenda Gray, Linda Richter, Michel W. Alexandre, Suwat Chariyalertsak, Alfred Chingono, Michael Sweat, Thomas Coates, Susan H. Eshleman
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Published: 2018
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http://cmuir.cmu.ac.th/jspui/handle/6653943832/50173
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spelling th-cmuir.6653943832-501732018-09-04T04:25:46Z HIV Surveillance in a Large, Community-Based Study: Results from the Pilot Study of Project Accept (HIV Prevention Trials Network 043) Estelle Piwowar-Manning Agnes Fiamma Oliver Laeyendecker Michal Kulich Deborah Donnell Greg Szekeres Laura Robins-Morris Caroline E. Mullis Ana Vallari John Hackett Timothy D. Mastro Glenda Gray Linda Richter Michel W. Alexandre Suwat Chariyalertsak Alfred Chingono Michael Sweat Thomas Coates Susan H. Eshleman Medicine Background: Project Accept is a community randomized, controlled trial to evaluate the efficacy of community mobilization, mobile testing, same-day results, and post-test support for the prevention of HIV infection in Thailand, Tanzania, Zimbabwe, and South Africa. We evaluated the accuracy of in-country HIV rapid testing and determined HIV prevalence in the Project Accept pilot study.Methods: Two HIV rapid tests were performed in parallel in local laboratories. If the first two rapid tests were discordant (one reactive, one non-reactive), a third HIV rapid test or enzyme immunoassay was performed. Samples were designated HIV NEG if the first two tests were non-reactive, HIV DISC if the first two tests were discordant, and HIV POS if the first two tests were reactive. Samples were re-analyzed in the United States using a panel of laboratory tests.Results: HIV infection status was correctly determined based on-in country testing for 2,236 (99.5%) of 2,247 participants [7 (0.37%) of 1,907 HIV NEG samples were HIV-positive; 2 (0.63%) of 317 HIV POS samples were HIV-negative; 2 (8.3%) of 24 HIV DISC samples were incorrectly identified as HIV-positive based on the in-country tie-breaker test]. HIV prevalence was: Thailand: 0.6%, Tanzania: 5.0%, Zimbabwe 14.7%, Soweto South Africa: 19.4%, Vulindlela, South Africa: 24.4%, (overall prevalence: 14.4%).Conclusions: In-country testing based on two HIV rapid tests correctly identified the HIV infection status for 99.5% of study participants; most participants with discordant HIV rapid tests were not infected. HIV prevalence varied considerably across the study sites (range: 0.6% to 24.4%).Trial Registration: ClinicalTrials.gov registry number NCT00203749. © 2011 Piwowar-Manning et al; licensee BioMed Central Ltd. 2018-09-04T04:25:46Z 2018-09-04T04:25:46Z 2011-09-24 Journal 14712334 2-s2.0-80053173912 10.1186/1471-2334-11-251 https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?partnerID=HzOxMe3b&scp=80053173912&origin=inward http://cmuir.cmu.ac.th/jspui/handle/6653943832/50173
institution Chiang Mai University
building Chiang Mai University Library
country Thailand
collection CMU Intellectual Repository
topic Medicine
spellingShingle Medicine
Estelle Piwowar-Manning
Agnes Fiamma
Oliver Laeyendecker
Michal Kulich
Deborah Donnell
Greg Szekeres
Laura Robins-Morris
Caroline E. Mullis
Ana Vallari
John Hackett
Timothy D. Mastro
Glenda Gray
Linda Richter
Michel W. Alexandre
Suwat Chariyalertsak
Alfred Chingono
Michael Sweat
Thomas Coates
Susan H. Eshleman
HIV Surveillance in a Large, Community-Based Study: Results from the Pilot Study of Project Accept (HIV Prevention Trials Network 043)
description Background: Project Accept is a community randomized, controlled trial to evaluate the efficacy of community mobilization, mobile testing, same-day results, and post-test support for the prevention of HIV infection in Thailand, Tanzania, Zimbabwe, and South Africa. We evaluated the accuracy of in-country HIV rapid testing and determined HIV prevalence in the Project Accept pilot study.Methods: Two HIV rapid tests were performed in parallel in local laboratories. If the first two rapid tests were discordant (one reactive, one non-reactive), a third HIV rapid test or enzyme immunoassay was performed. Samples were designated HIV NEG if the first two tests were non-reactive, HIV DISC if the first two tests were discordant, and HIV POS if the first two tests were reactive. Samples were re-analyzed in the United States using a panel of laboratory tests.Results: HIV infection status was correctly determined based on-in country testing for 2,236 (99.5%) of 2,247 participants [7 (0.37%) of 1,907 HIV NEG samples were HIV-positive; 2 (0.63%) of 317 HIV POS samples were HIV-negative; 2 (8.3%) of 24 HIV DISC samples were incorrectly identified as HIV-positive based on the in-country tie-breaker test]. HIV prevalence was: Thailand: 0.6%, Tanzania: 5.0%, Zimbabwe 14.7%, Soweto South Africa: 19.4%, Vulindlela, South Africa: 24.4%, (overall prevalence: 14.4%).Conclusions: In-country testing based on two HIV rapid tests correctly identified the HIV infection status for 99.5% of study participants; most participants with discordant HIV rapid tests were not infected. HIV prevalence varied considerably across the study sites (range: 0.6% to 24.4%).Trial Registration: ClinicalTrials.gov registry number NCT00203749. © 2011 Piwowar-Manning et al; licensee BioMed Central Ltd.
format Journal
author Estelle Piwowar-Manning
Agnes Fiamma
Oliver Laeyendecker
Michal Kulich
Deborah Donnell
Greg Szekeres
Laura Robins-Morris
Caroline E. Mullis
Ana Vallari
John Hackett
Timothy D. Mastro
Glenda Gray
Linda Richter
Michel W. Alexandre
Suwat Chariyalertsak
Alfred Chingono
Michael Sweat
Thomas Coates
Susan H. Eshleman
author_facet Estelle Piwowar-Manning
Agnes Fiamma
Oliver Laeyendecker
Michal Kulich
Deborah Donnell
Greg Szekeres
Laura Robins-Morris
Caroline E. Mullis
Ana Vallari
John Hackett
Timothy D. Mastro
Glenda Gray
Linda Richter
Michel W. Alexandre
Suwat Chariyalertsak
Alfred Chingono
Michael Sweat
Thomas Coates
Susan H. Eshleman
author_sort Estelle Piwowar-Manning
title HIV Surveillance in a Large, Community-Based Study: Results from the Pilot Study of Project Accept (HIV Prevention Trials Network 043)
title_short HIV Surveillance in a Large, Community-Based Study: Results from the Pilot Study of Project Accept (HIV Prevention Trials Network 043)
title_full HIV Surveillance in a Large, Community-Based Study: Results from the Pilot Study of Project Accept (HIV Prevention Trials Network 043)
title_fullStr HIV Surveillance in a Large, Community-Based Study: Results from the Pilot Study of Project Accept (HIV Prevention Trials Network 043)
title_full_unstemmed HIV Surveillance in a Large, Community-Based Study: Results from the Pilot Study of Project Accept (HIV Prevention Trials Network 043)
title_sort hiv surveillance in a large, community-based study: results from the pilot study of project accept (hiv prevention trials network 043)
publishDate 2018
url https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?partnerID=HzOxMe3b&scp=80053173912&origin=inward
http://cmuir.cmu.ac.th/jspui/handle/6653943832/50173
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