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Decreasing proportion of recent infections among newly diagnosed HIV-1 cases in Switzerland, 2008 to 2013 based on line-immunoassay-based algorithms

Schüpbach, J; Niederhauser, C; Yerly, S; Regenass, S; Gorgievski, M; Aubert, V; Ciardo, D; Klimkait, T; Dollenmaier, G; Andreutti, C; Martinetti, G; Brandenberger, M; Gebhardt, M D (2015). Decreasing proportion of recent infections among newly diagnosed HIV-1 cases in Switzerland, 2008 to 2013 based on line-immunoassay-based algorithms. PLoS ONE, 10(7):e0131828.

Abstract

Background
HIV surveillance requires monitoring of new HIV diagnoses and differentiation of incident and older infections. In 2008, Switzerland implemented a system for monitoring incident HIV infections based on the results of a line immunoassay (Inno-Lia) mandatorily conducted for HIV confirmation and type differentiation (HIV-1, HIV-2) of all newly diagnosed patients.
Based on this system, we assessed the proportion of incident HIV infection among newly diagnosed cases in Switzerland during 2008-2013.
Methods and Results
Inno-Lia antibody reaction patterns recorded in anonymous HIV notifications to the federal health authority were classified by 10 published algorithms into incident (up to 12 months) or older infections. Utilizing these data, annual incident infection estimates were obtained in
two ways, (i) based on the diagnostic performance of the algorithms and utilizing the relationship ‘incident = true incident + false incident’, (ii) based on the window-periods of the algorithms and utilizing the relationship ‘Prevalence = Incidence x Duration’. From 2008— 2013, 3’851 HIV notifications were received. Adult HIV-1 infections amounted to 3’809 cases, and 3’636 of them (95.5%) contained Inno-Lia data. Incident infection totals calculated were similar for the performance- and window-based methods, amounting on average to 1’755 (95% confidence interval, 1588—1923) and 1’790 cases (95% CI, 1679—1900, respectively. More than half of these were among men who had sex with men. Both methods showed a continuous decline of annual incident infections 2008—2013, totaling -59.5% and -50.2%, respectively. The decline of incident infections continued even in 2012, when a 15% increase in HIV notifications had been observed. This increase was entirely due to older infections. Overall declines 2008—2013 were of similar extent among the major transmission groups.
Conclusions
Inno-Lia based incident HIV-1 infection surveillance proved useful and reliable. It represents a free, additional public health benefit of the use of this relatively costly test for HIV confirmation and type differentiation.

Additional indexing

Item Type:Journal Article, refereed, original work
Communities & Collections:04 Faculty of Medicine > Institute of Medical Virology
04 Faculty of Medicine > University Hospital Zurich > Clinic for Immunology
Dewey Decimal Classification:570 Life sciences; biology
610 Medicine & health
Scopus Subject Areas:Life Sciences > General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology
Life Sciences > General Agricultural and Biological Sciences
Health Sciences > Multidisciplinary
Language:English
Date:31 July 2015
Deposited On:21 Jan 2016 11:58
Last Modified:15 Aug 2024 01:37
Publisher:Public Library of Science (PLoS)
ISSN:1932-6203
Funders:Swiss Federal Office of Public Health (SFOPH): contracts 07.005822, 09.001294, 10.001983 and 11.005726
OA Status:Gold
Free access at:PubMed ID. An embargo period may apply.
Publisher DOI:https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0131828
PubMed ID:26230082
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