AI Article Synopsis

  • Current HIV-1 viral-load tests are often too costly and lengthy for use in areas with limited resources and small sample sizes.
  • A new, efficient real-time PCR protocol was developed that can detect HIV-1 at levels from 100 to 500,000,000 copies/ml, appropriate for labs with low sample throughput.
  • This method is quick (around 3 hours), affordable, and successfully tracks all HIV-1 subtypes, providing results that align closely with existing commercial assays.

Article Abstract

Current HIV-1 viral-load assays are too expensive and time-consuming for small sample quantity or resource-limited setting. In addition, some commercial assays have shown shortcomings in quantifying rare genotypes. We developed an internally controlled, two-step, reverse transcription-initiated real-time PCR protocol on the LightCycler instrument achieving a favourable detection limit with an extended quantification range, detecting all HIV-1 subtypes suitable for laboratories with low sample throughput. The detection limit was found to be 100 copies/ml, the dynamic range up to 500,000,000 copies/ml. Intra and inter assay imprecision were 1.6% and 2.0% (n=10), respectively. The assay was calibrated against WHO Standard 97/656. The HIV-1 RNA values obtained by real-time PCR assay were highly correlated with those obtained by the Cobas Amplicor HIV-1 Monitor (r = 0.954; p < 0.001). This rapid (3 h) and cost effective assay is suitable for both HIV-1 detection and disease monitoring with the ability to detect and quantify all HIV-1 subtypes including O1 and O2.

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