The Cascade of Care From Routine Point-of-Care HIV Testing at Birth: Results From an 18-Months Pilot Program in Eswatini.

Journal of Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndromes : JAIDS
Philisiwe KhumaloJennifer Cohn

Abstract

HIV testing at birth may improve early treatment, but concerns remain about feasibility and retention of infants in care. In 2017, point-of-care (POC) HIV birth testing was introduced into routine care at 3 high-volume maternity health facilities in Eswatini. POC birth testing was offered to HIV-exposed infants (HEI) born at, or presenting to, 3 maternities within 3 days of birth. Data were collected from a project-specific EID test request form and routine registers on all tests conducted from August 1, 2017 to November 30, 2018, including retesting at 6-8 weeks for infants testing negative at birth and six-month retention in HIV care and viral load suppression among infants testing HIV-positive at birth. Of 4322 eligible HEI, 3311 (76.6%) were tested. Twenty-six HIV-infected infants were identified (positivity rate 0.8%) and 25 initiated on antiretroviral therapy (ART) (96.1%). The median time from sample collection to ART initiation was 20.50 days (IQR 14-45). Twenty-one (84%) ART-initiated infants were on ART at 6 months after initiation. Nineteen infants (90.5%) had viral load test information at 6 months and 16 (84.2%) were virally suppressed. Of 3126 HEI testing negative at birth, 3004 (96.1%) were linked to laboratory d...Continue Reading

References

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Nov 21, 2008·The New England Journal of Medicine·Avy ViolariUNKNOWN CHER Study Team
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