V Hodara, A Monticelli, S Pampuro, H Salomón, H Jauregui Rueda, O Libonatti
{"title":"HIV-1 viral load: comparative evaluation of three commercially available assays in Argentina.","authors":"V Hodara, A Monticelli, S Pampuro, H Salomón, H Jauregui Rueda, O Libonatti","doi":"","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"<p><p>Viral load (HIV-RNA copies per milliliter of plasma) has good correlation to prognosis considering progression to AIDS. The evaluation of commercial kits to measure viral load has become a need to find the most specific, sensitive and reproducible procedure to follow up HIV-infected patients. Hereby, a comparative analysis was done by using three different assays available in Argentina for quantitation of HIV-RNA in plasma. A plasma panel: 20 from HIV-1 infected individuals (9 asymptomatic and 11 symptomatic) and 9 from HIV-1 seronegative individuals was studied. Samples were run by Amplicor HIV-1 Monitor (Roche Diagnostic System, USA) Quantiplex HIV-1 RNA 2.0 Assay (Chiron Corporation, USA) and NASBA HIV-1 RNA QT (Organon Teknika, Holland). RNA was extracted from 0.2 ml of plasma for Amplicor, 0.1 ml and 1 ml of plasma for NASBA and, duplicates of 1 ml of plasma was centrifuged and pellet was used for bDNA assay no RNA extraction step. For a given specimen, a log difference of < 0.5 between assays was considered as concordant result. All seronegative samples were bellow the detection limit for all assays (Amplicor 200 c/ml, NASBA 400 c/ml and Quantiplex (bDNA) 500 c/ml). Two samples from asymptomatic patients were not detectable by NASBA (Sensitivity: 90%) Sensitivity was increased to 100% by using 1 ml of plasma. All samples were detectable by the other assays (sensitivity: 100%). For NASBA-bDNA, 74% samples were concordant, 35% for Amplicor-bDNA and 53% for NASBA-Amplicor. By using 1 ml of plasma from asymptomatic patients, concordance was 65% for NASBA-bDNA and 60% for NASBA Amplicor. Comparing samples from asymptomatic patients, only 22% was concordant in both cases. Reproducibility of NASBA was low (33% with differences lower than 0.5 Log) when 0.1 and 1 ml were used. Due to the levels of concordance of these results, it would be suggested to use always the same technique to follow up HIV-1 infection. The reproducibility of the assays should be tested by every laboratory and for every technician in charge of the assay in order to have confidence in the results specially to follow up HIV-infected patients or to monitor anti-viral therapies.</p>","PeriodicalId":7148,"journal":{"name":"Acta physiologica, pharmacologica et therapeutica latinoamericana : organo de la Asociacion Latinoamericana de Ciencias Fisiologicas y [de] la Asociacion Latinoamericana de Farmacologia","volume":"48 2","pages":"107-13"},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"1998-01-01","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Acta physiologica, pharmacologica et therapeutica latinoamericana : organo de la Asociacion Latinoamericana de Ciencias Fisiologicas y [de] la Asociacion Latinoamericana de Farmacologia","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"","RegionNum":0,"RegionCategory":null,"ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"","JCRName":"","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 0
Abstract
Viral load (HIV-RNA copies per milliliter of plasma) has good correlation to prognosis considering progression to AIDS. The evaluation of commercial kits to measure viral load has become a need to find the most specific, sensitive and reproducible procedure to follow up HIV-infected patients. Hereby, a comparative analysis was done by using three different assays available in Argentina for quantitation of HIV-RNA in plasma. A plasma panel: 20 from HIV-1 infected individuals (9 asymptomatic and 11 symptomatic) and 9 from HIV-1 seronegative individuals was studied. Samples were run by Amplicor HIV-1 Monitor (Roche Diagnostic System, USA) Quantiplex HIV-1 RNA 2.0 Assay (Chiron Corporation, USA) and NASBA HIV-1 RNA QT (Organon Teknika, Holland). RNA was extracted from 0.2 ml of plasma for Amplicor, 0.1 ml and 1 ml of plasma for NASBA and, duplicates of 1 ml of plasma was centrifuged and pellet was used for bDNA assay no RNA extraction step. For a given specimen, a log difference of < 0.5 between assays was considered as concordant result. All seronegative samples were bellow the detection limit for all assays (Amplicor 200 c/ml, NASBA 400 c/ml and Quantiplex (bDNA) 500 c/ml). Two samples from asymptomatic patients were not detectable by NASBA (Sensitivity: 90%) Sensitivity was increased to 100% by using 1 ml of plasma. All samples were detectable by the other assays (sensitivity: 100%). For NASBA-bDNA, 74% samples were concordant, 35% for Amplicor-bDNA and 53% for NASBA-Amplicor. By using 1 ml of plasma from asymptomatic patients, concordance was 65% for NASBA-bDNA and 60% for NASBA Amplicor. Comparing samples from asymptomatic patients, only 22% was concordant in both cases. Reproducibility of NASBA was low (33% with differences lower than 0.5 Log) when 0.1 and 1 ml were used. Due to the levels of concordance of these results, it would be suggested to use always the same technique to follow up HIV-1 infection. The reproducibility of the assays should be tested by every laboratory and for every technician in charge of the assay in order to have confidence in the results specially to follow up HIV-infected patients or to monitor anti-viral therapies.