Initiation of antiretroviral therapy during acute HIV-1 infection leads to a high rate of nonreactive HIV serology

MS de Souza… - Reviews of Infectious …, 2016 - academic.oup.com
MS de Souza, RV254/SEARCH010 Study Group, S Pinyakorn…
Reviews of Infectious Diseases, 2016academic.oup.com
Background. Third-and fourth-generation immunoassays (IAs) are widely used in the
diagnosis of human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) infection. Antiretroviral therapy (ART)
during acute HIV infection (AHI) may impact HIV-specific antibodies, with failure to develop
antibody or seroreversion. We report on the ability of diagnostic tests to detect HIV-specific
antibodies in Thai participants initiating ART during AHI. Methods. Participants with
detectable plasma HIV RNA but nonreactive HIV-specific immunoglobulin G, enrolled in an …
Abstract
Background.  Third- and fourth-generation immunoassays (IAs) are widely used in the diagnosis of human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) infection. Antiretroviral therapy (ART) during acute HIV infection (AHI) may impact HIV-specific antibodies, with failure to develop antibody or seroreversion. We report on the ability of diagnostic tests to detect HIV-specific antibodies in Thai participants initiating ART during AHI.
Methods.  Participants with detectable plasma HIV RNA but nonreactive HIV-specific immunoglobulin G, enrolled in an AHI study, were offered immediate initiation of ART. Participants were tested at initiation and at 12 and 24 weeks following treatment using standard second-, third-, and fourth-generation IAs and Western blot (WB).
Results.  Participants (N = 234) initiating ART at a median of 19 days (range, 1–62 days) from HIV exposure demonstrated different frequencies of reactivity prior to and following 24 weeks of ART depending on the IA. Third-generation IA nonreactivity prior to ART was 48%, which decreased to 4% following ART ( P < .001). Fourth-generation IA nonreactivity was 18% prior to ART and 17% following ART ( P = .720). Negative WB results were observed in 89% and 12% of participants prior to and following 24 weeks of ART, respectively ( P < .001). Seroreversion to nonreactivity during ART was observed to at least one of the tests in 20% of participants, with fourth-generation IA demonstrating the highest frequency (11%) of seroreversion.
Conclusions.  HIV-specific antibodies may fail to develop and, when detected, may decline when ART is initiated during AHI. Although fourth-generation IA was the most sensitive at detecting AHI prior to ART, third-generation IA was the most sensitive during treatment.
Clinical Trials Registration.  NCT00796146 and NCT00796263.
Oxford University Press