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This article by Mark Thrun, MD from Denver Public Health focuses on the spectrum of care for individuals at risk for HIV, emphasizing prevention through behavior modification, risk acknowledgment, counseling, and screening. It highlights the importance of awareness of serostatus, testing technologies, and linkage to care for those living with HIV. Updated CDC recommendations for HIV screening in clinical settings are discussed, along with statistics on HIV testing and care-seeking behavior. The text also covers predictive values of different HIV tests, positive test results implications, and the significance of linkage into care for HIV-positive individuals.
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HIV Testing in Medical Settings Mark Thrun, MD Denver Public Health Mark.thrun@dhha.org
Prevention is Spectrum Spans the spectrum of care of persons at risk for HIV Ongoing personal behavior modification Personal assessment/ acknowledgement of risk Prevention discussions/ counseling Positive HIV Test Screening for STD/HIV
Prevention is Spectrum Spans the spectrum of care of persons living withHIV Compliance with care Linkage into HIV care Prevention discussions/screening in care Positive HIV Test Return to HIV care
Updated CDC recommendations for HIV screening in clinical care settings • All patients between 13 – 64 years of age – an initial screening test • All patients being evaluated for possible TB • All patients being evaluated for possible STD • Annual screening for persons at increased risk • Men who have sex with men • Persons with > 1 sexual partner • Drug users
Awareness of Serostatus Among People with HIV and Estimates of Transmission ~25% Unaware of Infection Accounting for: ~54% of New Infections Marks, et al AIDS 2006;20:1447-50 ~75% Aware of Infection ~46% of New Infections People Living with HIV/AIDS: 1,039,000-1,185,000 New Sexual Infections Each Year: ~32,000
Knowledge is Power Multispot HIV-1/HIV-2 Uni-Gold Recombigen OraQuick Advance Reveal G2
Persons aware of HIV infection less likely to have risk of transmission Marks, JAIDS 2005
HIV tests* HIV+ tests** Private doctor/HMO 44% 17% Hospital, ED, Outpatient 22% 27% Community clinic (public) 9% 21% HIV counseling/testing 5% 9% Correctional facility 0.6% 5% STD clinic 0.1% 6% Drug treatment clinic 0.7% 2% Source of HIV Tests and Positive Tests • 38% - 44% of adults age 18-64 have been tested • 16-22 million persons age 18-64 tested annually in U.S. *National Health Interview Survey, 2002 **Suppl. to HIV/AIDS surveillance, 2000-2003
Many persons living with HIV seek care outside HIV clinic • HIV clinic 2006 : 220 people at risk for transmitting HIV • 1000 patients x 22% high risk • STD clinic 2006: 167 people at risk for transmitting HIV • Clients asked HIV status or offered HIV test • ED estimate 2006: 315 people at risk for transmitting HIV • 3.5% in DH ED HIV+; 0.7% previously unrecognized infection x approx 45K unique visits/yr (Goggin, J Emerg Med, 2000)
ED Testing and Counseling Haukoos, Acad Emerg Med, 2007
Targeted testing * 1 died, 1 incarcerated, 1 homeless
Changes in the clinic re: HIV testing • HIV testing acceptance and HIV test positivity was evaluated for 4 time periods: • Period 1: The year before introduction of rapid testing • December 2002 – November 2003 • Period 2: The 6 months following introduction or rapid testing, before logistical adjustment in the clinic and discontinuation of the standard test • December 2003 – May 2004 • Period 3: The 10 months following logistical adjustment, but before introduction of the electronic medical record and opt-out testing • June 2004 – March 2005 • Period 4: The 6 months following opt-out testing • April 2005 – September 2005
HIV Testing Acceptance % Period 1: Before introduction of rapid testing Period 2: Following Period 1, before logistical adjustments Period 3: Following Period 2, before opt-out consent Period 4: After Introduction of opt-out
HIV Positivity % Period 1: Before introduction of rapid testing Period 2: Following Period 1, before logistical adjustments Period 3: Following Period 2, before opt-out consent Period 4: After Introduction of opt-out
Rapid testing only. Rapid Testing Trends9/01/03 – 9/31/04 Change in clinic logistics Number of Tests Performed
Impacts of Rapid Testing Denver Metro Health Clinic Percentage of patients who received their positive test results: Before: After: 66% 100%
Predictive Value, Positive Test HIV Prevalence OraQuick Reveal Single EIA Uni - Gold 10% 99% 92% 98% 97% 5% 98% 85% 96% 95% 2% 95% 69% 91% 87% 1% 91% 53% 83% 77% 0.5% 83% 36% 71% 63% 0.3% 75% 25% 60% 50% 0.1% 50% 10% 33% 25% Test Specificity 99.9% 99.1% 99.8% 99.7% Positive predictive values
Caveat: Routine HIV testing may mean more staff time Lessons in positive predictive value Example 1: Test 1,000 persons Test Specificity 99.6% HIV Prevalence 10% True Positives: 100 False Positives: 4 Positive predictive value: 100/104 = 96% Example 2: Test 1,000 persons Test Specificity 99.6% HIV Prevalence 0.4% True Positives: 4 False Positives: 4 Positive predictive value: 4/8 = 50%
Disposition and Linkage into Care Haukoos, Acad Emerg Med, 2007
Coordination of referrals Haukoos, Acad Emerg Med, 2007
Linkage to Care: Denver 2005 - 6/2007 Patients referred to LTC staff: 366 Patients seen by LTC staff: 311 Confirmed linked to care: 220 (71%)
Training Needs Related to Expansion of Testing • New technologies require staff to be brought up to speed • Emphasis of training may need to shift • Less didactic class time • More technical assistance • Training must be ongoing and collaborative • Training needs may fall outside “target” topic area: e.g. testing and linkage to care
Kees Rietmeijer Jason Haukoos Emily Hopkins Bill Burman Tom Deem Marshall Gourley Reina Lopez Ryan Westergaard Acknowledgements