Late Presentation to HIV Care

A special issue of Microorganisms (ISSN 2076-2607). This special issue belongs to the section "Virology".

Deadline for manuscript submissions: closed (31 December 2023) | Viewed by 1909

Special Issue Editors


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Guest Editor
Infectious Diseases Department, Odense University Hospital, 5000 Odense, Denmark
Interests: HIV testing; late HIV presentation; primary health care; epidemiology; tuberculosis

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Guest Editor
Infectious Diseases Division, University Hospital Germans Trias, 08916 Badalona, Spain
Interests: HIV infection; HIV resistance; antiretroviral treatment; antiretroviral strategies; HIV resistance tests; SARS-CoV2

Special Issue Information

Dear Colleagues,

The World Health Organization defines “late presentation” as a new HIV diagnosis with concurrent acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS)-defining events, or a new HIV diagnosis with a CD4+ count less than 350 cells/mm3.

Late presentation is associated with ongoing HIV transmission, lower antiretroviral treatment outcomes, lower chances of experiencing a robust CD4+ cell gain, higher HIV reservoirs, higher healthcare costs, and overall more adverse outcomes and co-morbidities, eventually including a shorter life expectancy. Late HIV diagnosis remains a major challenge for most European countries. The percentage is approximately 40% and varied across transmission categories. It increases with age, ranging from 33% among people aged 15–19 at diagnosis to 65% among those aged 50 years or above. On the other hand, an early initiation of antiretroviral treatment has been associated with a substantially smaller HIV reservoir, thus reinforcing the need for proactive strategies to diagnose occult HIV infection.

There is an ongoing need for an opportunistic automated HIV screening strategy to reduce late diagnosis rates and detect missed opportunities for earlier diagnosis. Moreover, screening and testing awareness campaigns have had a limited impact in lowering late diagnosis numbers, and insufficient HIV testing in different healthcare settings seems to be generalized. Not unexpectedly, healthcare professionals and the health system itself have been identified as two of the major barriers to proactive HIV testing, allegedly because of a lack of time, a lack of training, uneasiness discussing sexual health with patients, or even fear of being perceived as discriminatory by patients.

In this Special Issue of Microorganisms, we review the current situation of late HIV presentation in Europe, the determinants associated with it, its impact on life expectancy and causes of death, the established HIV reservoir and comorbidities, as well as strategies targeted at proactively diagnosing subjects with occult HIV infection in healthcare facilities.

Dr. Raquel Martín-Iguacel
Dr. Josep Maria Llibre
Guest Editors

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Keywords

  • late HIV presentation
  • late HIV treatment initiation
  • occult HIV
  • late presenter
  • HIV screening
  • HIV screening strategies
  • early antiretroviral treatment

Published Papers (1 paper)

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Systematic Review
Systematic Review: Strategies for Improving HIV Testing and Detection Rates in European Hospitals
by Klaske J. Vliegenthart-Jongbloed, Marta Vasylyev, Carlijn C. E. Jordans, Jose I. Bernardino, Silvia Nozza, Christina K. Psomas, Florian Voit, Tristan J. Barber, Agata Skrzat-Klapaczyńska, Oana Săndulescu and Casper Rokx
Microorganisms 2024, 12(2), 254; https://doi.org/10.3390/microorganisms12020254 - 25 Jan 2024
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Abstract
Undiagnosed HIV infection is a prominent clinical issue throughout Europe that requires the continuous attention of all healthcare professionals and policymakers to prevent missed testing opportunities and late diagnosis. This systematic review aimed to evaluate interventions to increase HIV testing rates and case [...] Read more.
Undiagnosed HIV infection is a prominent clinical issue throughout Europe that requires the continuous attention of all healthcare professionals and policymakers to prevent missed testing opportunities and late diagnosis. This systematic review aimed to evaluate interventions to increase HIV testing rates and case detection in European hospitals. Out of 4598 articles identified, 29 studies fulfilled the selection criteria. Most of the studies were conducted in single Western European capital cities, and only one study was from Eastern Europe. The main interventions investigated were test-all and indicator-condition-based testing strategies. Overall, the prevalence of undiagnosed HIV was well above 0.1%. The studied interventions increased the HIV testing rate and the case detection rate. The highest prevalence of undiagnosed HIV was found with the indicator-condition-driven testing strategy, whereas the test-all strategy had the most profound impact on the proportion of late diagnoses. Nevertheless, the HIV testing rates and case-finding varied considerably across studies. In conclusion, effective strategies to promote HIV testing in European hospitals are available, but relevant knowledge gaps regarding generalizability and sustainability remain. These gaps require the promotion of adherence to HIV testing guidelines, as well as additional larger studies representing all European regions. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Late Presentation to HIV Care)
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