AI Article Synopsis

  • The study explores dried spots of plasma, whole blood, and mother's milk on filter paper as a practical method for collecting and storing samples for HIV-1 viral load testing in challenging field conditions.
  • Comparison with plasma in lysis buffer showed no significant difference in viral load measurements, while whole blood in lysis buffer was found to be unreliable.
  • The findings suggest that using filter paper for dried samples is a cost-effective and reliable alternative, especially in low-resource settings like sub-Saharan Africa, allowing for improved monitoring of HIV-1 viral loads.

Article Abstract

We studied the use of dried spots of bodily fluids (plasma, whole blood, and mother's milk) on filter paper as a means of sample collection and storage for human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) viral load testing under stringent field conditions. Plasma placed directly in lysis buffer, which is customarily used for viral load assays, was used for comparison in all our experiments. Utilizing reconstruction experiments, we demonstrate no statistical differences between viral loads determined for plasma and mother's milk spotted on filter paper and those for the same fluids placed directly in lysis buffer. We found that the addition of whole blood directly to lysis buffer was unreliable and could not be considered a feasible option. However, viral load measurements for whole blood spotted onto filter paper correlated with plasma viral load values for both filter spots and lysis buffer (Pearson correlation coefficients, 0.7706 and 0.8155, respectively). In conclusion, dried spots of plasma, whole blood, or mother's milk provide a feasible means for the collection, storage, and shipment of samples for subsequent viral load measurement and monitoring. Virus material spotted and dried on filter paper is a good inexpensive alternative for collecting patient material to monitor the HIV-1 viral load. Measuring the HIV-1 burden from whole blood dried on filter paper provides a suitable alternative for low-technology settings with limited access to refrigeration, as can be found in sub-Saharan Africa.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1829137PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1128/JCM.01919-06DOI Listing

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