Revising expectations from rapid HIV tests in the emergency department

被引:67
|
作者
Walensky, Rochelle P. [1 ]
Arbelaez, Christian
Reichmann, William M.
Walls, Ron M.
Katz, Jeffrey N.
Block, Brian L.
Dooley, Matthew
Hetland, Adam
Kimmel, Simeon
Solomon, Jessica D.
Losina, Elena
机构
[1] Harvard Univ, Sch Med, Massachusetts Gen Hosp, Brigham & Womens Hosp, Boston, MA 02114 USA
关键词
D O I
10.7326/0003-4819-149-3-200808050-00003
中图分类号
R5 [内科学];
学科分类号
1002 ; 100201 ;
摘要
Background: Expanded HIV screening efforts in the United States have increased the use of rapid HIV tests in emergency departments. The reported sensitivity and specificity of rapid HIV tests exceed 99%. Objective: To assess whether a reactive rapid oral HIV test result correctly identifies adults with HIV infection in the emergency department. Design: Diagnostic test performance assessment within the framework of a randomized, clinical trial. Setting: Brigham and Women's Hospital emergency department (Boston, Massachusetts) from 7 February to 1 October 2007. Patients: 849 adults with valid rapid oral HIV test results. Intervention: Rapid HIV testing with the OraQuick ADVANCE Rapid HIV-1/2 Antibody Test (OraSure Technologies, Bethlehem, Pennsylvania). Patients with reactive rapid test results were offered enzyme-linked immunoassay, Western blot, and plasma HIV-1 RNA testing for confirmation. Measurements: Specificity and positive likelihood ratio. Results: 39 patients had reactive results (4.6% [95% CI, 3.2% to 6.0%]). On confirmation, 5 patients were HIV-infected (prevalence, 0.6% [CI, 0.1% to 1.1%]) and 26 were non-HIV-infected (8 patients declined confirmation). The estimated rapid test specificity was 96.9% (CI, 95.7% to 98.1%). Sensitivity analyses of the true HIV status of unconfirmed cases and test sensitivity resulted in a positive likelihood ratio of 8 to 32. Western blot alone as a confirmation test provided conclusive HIV status in only 50.0% (CI, 30.8% to 69.2%) of patients at first follow-up. The addition of HIV-1 RNA testing to the confirmation protocol improved this rate to 96.2% (CI, 88.8% to 100.0%). Limitation: Test sensitivity cannot be assessed because nonreactive OraQuick test results were not confirmed. Conclusion: Although patients with a reactive oral OraQuick HIV screening test in the emergency department had an 8- to 32-fold increased odds of HIV infection compared with the pretest odds, the specificity of the test was lower than anticipated.
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页码:153 / 160
页数:8
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