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The role of targeted viral load testing in diagnosing virological failure in children on antiretroviral therapy with immunological failure | Journal Article / Research | MSF Science Portal
Journal Article
|Research

The role of targeted viral load testing in diagnosing virological failure in children on antiretroviral therapy with immunological failure

Davies MA, Boulle AM, Technau KG, Eley B, Moultrie H, Rabie H, Garone DB, Giddy J, Wood R, Egger M, Keiser O
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Abstract
OBJECTIVES
To determine the improvement in positive predictive value of immunological failure criteria for identifying virological failure in HIV-infected children on antiretroviral therapy (ART) when a single targeted viral load measurement is performed in children identified as having immunological failure.

METHODS
Analysis of data from children (<16 years at ART initiation) at South African ART sites at which CD4 count/per cent and HIV-RNA monitoring are performed 6-monthly. Immunological failure was defined according to both WHO 2010 and United States Department of Health and Human Services (DHHS) 2008 criteria. Confirmed virological failure was defined as HIV-RNA >5000 copies/ml on two consecutive occasions <365 days apart in a child on ART for ≥18 months.

RESULTS
Among 2798 children on ART for ≥18 months [median (IQR) age 50 (21-84) months at ART initiation], the cumulative probability of confirmed virological failure by 42 months on ART was 6.3%. Using targeted viral load after meeting DHHS immunological failure criteria rather than DHHS immunological failure criteria alone increased positive predictive value from 28% to 82%. Targeted viral load improved the positive predictive value of WHO 2010 criteria for identifying confirmed virological failure from 49% to 82%.

CONCLUSION
The addition of a single viral load measurement in children identified as failing immunologically will prevent most switches to second-line treatment in virologically suppressed children.

Countries

South Africa

Subject Area

diagnosticspediatrics

Languages

English
DOI
10.1111/j.1365-3156.2012.03073.x
Published Date
01 Sep 2012
PubMed ID
22974345
Journal
Tropical Medicine and International Health
Volume | Issue | Pages
Volume 7, Issue 11, Pages 1386-1390
Issue Date
2012-09-14
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