Journal of the International Association of Providers of AIDS Care (Feb 2020)

Point-of-Care Early Infant Diagnosis Improves Adherence to the Testing Algorithm in Kenya

  • Collins Otieno Odhiambo PhD,
  • George Githuka MD, MPH,
  • Nancy Bowen MSc,
  • Leonard Kingwara MSc,
  • Jared Onsase BSc,
  • Bernard Ochuka MPH,
  • Michael Waweru MSc, MPH,
  • Rose Masaba MD, MSc,
  • Lucy Matu MD, MSc,
  • Eliud Mwangi MD, MPH,
  • Jennifer Cohn MD, MPH

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1177/2325958220906030
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 19

Abstract

Read online

Introduction: We determine the level of adherence to the revised Kenya early infant diagnosis (EID) algorithm during implementation of a point-of-care (POC) EID project. Methods: Data before (August 2016 to July 2017) and after (August 2017 to July 2018) introduction of POC EID were collected retrospectively from the national EID database and registers for 33 health facilities. We assessed the number of HIV-infected infants who underwent confirmatory testing and received baseline viral load test and proportion of infants with an initial negative result who had a subsequent test. Results and Discussion: Significantly higher number of infants accessed confirmatory testing (94.2% versus 38.6%; P < .0001) with POC EID. Baseline viral load test and follow-up testing at 6 months, although higher with POC EID, were not significantly different from the pre-POC EID intervention period. Conclusion: The POC EID implementation has the potential to increase proportion of infants who receive confirmatory testing, thus reducing the risk of false-positive results.