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13th Conference on Retroviruses and Opportunistic InfectionsDenver, Colorado - February 5-8, 2006 |
Conf Retrovir Opportunistic Infect 2006 Feb 5-8;13:abstract no. 34LBb
Bernard Branson1
, L Wesolowski1, K Delaney1, M Mavinkurve2, T Dowling3, and D Mackellar1
1CDC, Atlanta, GA, US; 2New York City Dept of Hlth and Mental Hygiene, NY, US; and 3San Francisco Dept of Publ Hlth, CA, US
BACKGROUND: In March 2004, the FDA approved the OraQuick Advance HIV 1/2 Rapid Antibody Test for use with oral fluids. In December 2005, media reports about high rates of false-positive (FP) oral fluid tests in New York City (NYC) and San Francisco (SF) raised questions about the test’s accuracy.
METHODS: CDC investigated OraQuick performance using the following data sources: (1) 4 studies conducted between 2000 and 2005 in diverse populations in which the test was performed on whole blood and oral fluid collected simultaneously and compared with EIA/Western blot results; (2) post-marketing surveillance conducted from August 2004 to June 2005 at 368 testing sites in 14 states and 3 cities (project areas); and (3), from testing of oral fluid specimens conducted September to November 2005 in NYC and SF test sites.
RESULTS: Of 12,010 HIV-negative persons tested in the 4 studies combined, OraQuick specificity was 99.9% (95% CI: 99.8-100) with whole blood and 99.6% (95% CI: 99.4-99.7) with oral fluid; serum EIA specificity was 99.7% (95% CI: 99.6-99.8). In post-marketing surveillance, median specificity for the 17 project areas was 99.98% (range 99.7-100) for 134,247 whole blood tests and 99.90 (range 99.4-100) for 25,614 oral fluid tests. Excess FPs were observed at 3 sites in NYC and 1 site in SF but not at 18 other sites in the same cities using the same test kit lots.
| NYC - 3 sites with excess FP | NYC -7 sites without excess FP | |||||
| # tests | # false pos | Specificity | # tests | # false pos | Specificity | |
| Sept | 1662 | 4 | 99.8% | 2316 | 2 | 99.9% |
| Oct | 1762 | 10 | 99.4% | 2279 | 1 | 99.9% |
| Nov | 1581 | 32 | 98.0% | 2164 | 3 | 99.9% |
| SF - 1 site with excess FP | SF - 11 sites without excess FP | |||||
| # tests | # false pos | Specificity | # tests | # false pos | Specificity | |
| Sept | 232 | 8 | 96.5% | 472 | 1 | 99.8% |
| Oct | 262 | 9 | 96.5% | 587 | 3 | 99.5% |
| Nov | 160 | 6 | 96.3% | 551 | 5 | 99.1% |
CONCLUSIONS: Specificity of the OraQuick test is slightly lower with oral fluid than with whole blood, but still well above the FDA’s minimum threshold of 98% for rapid HIV tests. Investigation continues to identify site-specific factors that may lead to more FP oral fluid test results than expected.
2006-02-05
34LBb
Copyright © 2006 - Foundation for Retrovirology and Human Health. Reproduction of this abstract (other than one copy for personal reference) must be cleared through the Foundation for Retrovirology and Human Health.