Improved HIV-1 incidence estimates using the BED capture enzyme immunoassay
- 19 February 2008
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Wolters Kluwer Health in AIDS
- Vol. 22 (4) , 511-518
- https://doi.org/10.1097/qad.0b013e3282f2a960
Abstract
To validate the BED capture enzyme immunoassay for HIV-1 subtype C and to derive adjustments facilitating estimation of HIV-1 incidence from cross-sectional surveys. Laboratory analysis of archived plasma samples collected in Zimbabwe. Serial plasma samples from 85 women who seroconverted to HIV-1 during the postpartum year were assayed by BED and used to estimate the window period between seroconversion and the attainment of a specified BED absorbance. HIV-1 incidences for the year prior to recruitment and for the postpartum year were calculated by applying the BED technique to HIV-1-positive samples collected at baseline and at 12 months. The mean window for an absorbance cut-off of 0.8 was 187 days. Among women who were HIV-1 positive at baseline and retested at 12 months, a proportion (epsilon) 5.2% (142/2749) had a BED absorbance < 0.8 at 12 months and were falsely identified as recent seroconverters. Consequently, the estimated BED annual incidence at 12 months postpartum (7.6%) was 2.2 times the contemporary prospective estimate. BED incidence adjusted for epsilon was 3.5% [95% confidence interval (CI), 2.6-4.5], close to the 3.4% estimated prospectively. Adjusted BED incidence at baseline was 6.0% (95% CI, 5.2-6.9) and, like the prospective estimates, declined with maternal age. Unadjusted BED incidence estimates were largely independent of age; the pooled estimate was 58% higher than adjusted incidence. The BED method can be used in an African setting, but further estimates of epsilon and of the window period are required, using large samples in a variety of circumstances, before its general utility can be gauged.Keywords
This publication has 9 references indexed in Scilit:
- Investigating the utility of the HIV-1 BED capture enzyme immunoassay using cross-sectional and longitudinal seroconverter specimens from AfricaAIDS, 2007
- Comparison of HIV Type 1 Incidence Observed during Longitudinal Follow-Up with Incidence Estimated by Cross-Sectional Analysis Using the BED Capture Enzyme ImmunoassayAIDS Research and Human Retroviruses, 2006
- HIV incidence among post-partum women in Zimbabwe: risk factors and the effect of vitamin A supplementationAIDS, 2006
- Effects of a Single Large Dose of Vitamin A, Given during the Postpartum Period to HIV‐Positive Women and Their Infants, on Child HIV Infection, HIV‐Free Survival, and MortalityThe Journal of Infectious Diseases, 2006
- Increased risk of incident HIV during pregnancy in Rakai, Uganda: a prospective studyThe Lancet, 2005
- Temporal Trends in HIV Type 1 Incidence among Inner-City Childbearing Women in Atlanta: Use of the IgG-Capture BED-Enzyme ImmunoassayAIDS Research and Human Retroviruses, 2005
- Surveillance for HIV-1 incidence using tests for recent infection in resource-constrained countriesAIDS, 2005
- Early exclusive breastfeeding reduces the risk of postnatal HIV-1 transmission and increases HIV-free survivalAIDS, 2005
- Quantitative Detection of Increasing HIV Type 1 Antibodies after Seroconversion: A Simple Assay for Detecting Recent HIV Infection and Estimating IncidenceAIDS Research and Human Retroviruses, 2002