4.3 Article

Performance Evaluation of the Alere PIMA CD4 Test for Monitoring HIV-Infected Individuals in Resource-Constrained Settings

Journal

Publisher

LIPPINCOTT WILLIAMS & WILKINS
DOI: 10.1097/QAI.0b013e31822866a2

Keywords

AIDS; CD4 T-lymphocyte count; flow cytometry; HIV; PIMA; point-of-care testing

Funding

  1. Thailand Research Fund-Senior Research Scholar Award
  2. Chalermphrakiat Grant
  3. Faculty of Medicine Siriraj Hospital
  4. Mahidol University
  5. Office of the Higher Education Commission
  6. Mahidol University under the National Research University Initiative

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Background: Enumeration of CD4 broken vertical bar T-lymphocytes is important in the management of HIV. However, standard laboratory systems based on flow cytometry are expensive, complicated, and thus unavailable to most resource-limited settings where a low-cost and fully automated point-of-care CD4 testing system is required. In attempts to address this issue, a study was conducted to validate the Alere PIMA point-of-care CD4 test. Method: Duplicate values of the absolute number of CD4+ T-lymphocytes in 203 HIV-infected blood samples obtained using the PIMA system were compared with the two predicate single-platform FACSCount and the dual-platform FACSCan (Becton Dickinson Biosciences). Results: The overall absolute CD4+ T-lymphocyte count obtained using the PIMA system correlated highly with the FACSCount (r(2) = 0.957; mean bias, -54.2 cells/mu L; limit of agreement, -190.9 to +82.5 cells/mu L) and the FACSCan (r(2) = 0.957; mean bias -44.0 cells/mu L; limit of agreement, -179.7 to +91.6 cells/mu L). Good correlation and low biases were also observed for samples with CD4+ T-lymphocyte count ranges of 0 to 200 and 0 to 350 cells/mu L. Additionally, there was no significant difference in absolute CD4+ T-lymphocyte counts noted between the duplicate samples using the PIMA system. Conclusions: This new point-of-care product is a simple and reliable system and should contribute significantly to the simplification of performing CD4 testing and thus increase access for patients in resource-limited settings. The inability to obtain values for the frequency (%) of CD4+ T-lymphocyte count is one limitation of the PIMA system, the addition of which would be of value for clinical staging or monitoring in HIV-infected pediatric patients.

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