Identifying missed clinical opportunities for the earlier diagnosis of HIV in Australia, a retrospective cohort data linkage study

Background Treatment as prevention approaches for HIV require optimal HIV testing strategies to reduce undiagnosed HIV infections. In most settings, HIV testing strategies still result in unacceptably high rates of missed and late diagnoses. This study aimed to identify clinical opportunities for targeted HIV testing in persons at risk to facilitate earlier HIV diagnosis in New South Wales, Australia; and to assess the duration between the diagnosis of specific conditions and HIV diagnosis. Methods The Australian National HIV registry was linked to cancer diagnoses, notifiable condition diagnoses, emergency department presentations and hospital admissions for all HIV diagnoses between 1993 and 2012 in NSW. Date of HIV acquisition was estimated from back-projection models and people with a likely duration from infection to diagnosis of less than 180 days were excluded. Risk factors associated with clinical opportunities for the earlier diagnosis of HIV were identified. Results Sexually transmitted infection diagnoses (particularly gonorrhoea and syphilis) and some hospital admissions (mental health and drug-related diagnoses, and non-infective digestive disorder diagnoses) were prominent among people estimated to be living with undiagnosed HIV. The length of time between a clinical opportunity for the earlier HIV diagnosis and actual HIV diagnosis was 13.3 months for notifiable conditions, and 15.2 months for hospital admissions. People with lower CD4+ cell count at diagnosis, and older people were significantly less likely to have a missed opportunity for earlier HIV diagnosis. Conclusions Additional targeted clinical HIV testing strategies are warranted for people with gonorrhoea and syphilis; and hospital presentations or admissions for mental health, drug-related and gastrointestinal diagnoses.

[1]  U. Vollmer-Conna,et al.  Determining the factors associated with blood‐borne virus testing of substance misusers presenting to hospital , 2017, Internal medicine journal.

[2]  M. Law,et al.  Hospitalization for Anxiety and Mood Disorders in HIV-Infected and -Uninfected Gay and Bisexual Men , 2016, Journal of acquired immune deficiency syndromes.

[3]  S. Geerlings,et al.  The need to scale up HIV indicator condition-guided testing for early case-finding: a case-control study in primary care , 2016, BMC Family Practice.

[4]  Richard Gray,et al.  HIV, viral hepatitis and sexually transmissible infections in Australia , 2016 .

[5]  G. Rahav,et al.  Missed opportunities for earlier diagnosis of HIV in patients who presented with advanced HIV disease: a retrospective cohort study , 2016, BMJ Open.

[6]  M. Law,et al.  Patterns of Drug Use and Drug-related Hospital Admissions in HIV-Positive and -Negative Gay and Bisexual Men , 2016, AIDS and Behavior.

[7]  K. Mallitt,et al.  Inferring HIV incidence from case surveillance with CD4+ cell counts , 2015, AIDS.

[8]  J. D. de Wit,et al.  Alcohol use among a community-based sample of gay men: Correlates of high-risk use and implications for service provision. , 2015, Drug and alcohol review.

[9]  J. Amin,et al.  Examining the quality of name code record linkage: what is the impact on death and cancer risk estimates? A validation study , 2015, Australian and New Zealand journal of public health.

[10]  Alex,et al.  Drug Resistant Gonorrhoea-A Public Health Challenge , 2015 .

[11]  T. Peterman,et al.  Risk for HIV following a diagnosis of syphilis, gonorrhoea or chlamydia: 328,456 women in Florida, 2000–2011 , 2015, International journal of STD & AIDS.

[12]  B. Williams,et al.  Modeling the Implementation of Universal Coverage for HIV Treatment as Prevention and its Impact on the HIV Epidemic , 2014, Current HIV/AIDS Reports.

[13]  M. O’Sullivan,et al.  Late diagnosis of human immunodeficiency virus infection in patients with viral hepatitis , 2013, Internal medicine journal.

[14]  M. McCarthy US panel recommends HIV screening for everyone aged 15 to 64 years , 2013, British medical journal.

[15]  J. Haukoos,et al.  Understanding HIV screening in the emergency department: is perception reality? , 2013, Academic emergency medicine : official journal of the Society for Academic Emergency Medicine.

[16]  A. Egli,et al.  Late presentation of HIV despite earlier opportunities for detection, experience from an Irish Tertiary Referral Institution , 2013, Irish Journal of Medical Science.

[17]  J. B. Hoover,et al.  Monitoring HIV Testing at Visits to Emergency Departments in the United States: Very-Low Rate of HIV Testing , 2013, Journal of acquired immune deficiency syndromes.

[18]  David P. Wilson,et al.  Projected Demographic Profile of People Living with HIV in Australia: Planning for an Older Generation , 2012, PloS one.

[19]  L. Vodstrcil,et al.  Risk-based HIV testing of men who have sex with men would result in missed HIV diagnoses. , 2012, Sexually transmitted diseases.

[20]  J. Haukoos The impact of nontargeted HIV screening in emergency departments and the ongoing need for targeted strategies. , 2012, Archives of internal medicine.

[21]  A. Oster,et al.  Missed opportunities for HIV testing in health care settings among young African American men who have sex with men: implications for the HIV epidemic. , 2011, AIDS patient care and STDs.

[22]  C. Sabin,et al.  Late HIV presentation: epidemiology, clinical implications and management , 2011, Expert review of anti-infective therapy.

[23]  P. Robertson,et al.  Positive Epstein–Barr virus and cytomegalovirus IgM assays in primary HIV infection , 2011, Journal of medical virology.

[24]  S. Karim,et al.  HIV prevention transformed: the new prevention research agenda , 2011, The Lancet.

[25]  Jeremy Brown,et al.  The Prevalence of Undiagnosed HIV Infection in Those Who Decline HIV Screening in an Urban Emergency Department , 2011, AIDS research and treatment.

[26]  Shou-Jiang Tang,et al.  Human Immunodeficiency Virus-Associated Gastrointestinal Disease: Common Endoscopic Biopsy Diagnoses , 2011, Pathology research international.

[27]  Regina M. Benjamin,et al.  A Way Forward: The National HIV/AIDS Strategy and Reducing HIV Incidence in the United States , 2010, Journal of acquired immune deficiency syndromes.

[28]  M. Jacobs,et al.  Undiagnosed HIV infection in patients with viral hepatitis , 2008, BMJ : British Medical Journal.

[29]  A. Pinching,et al.  HIV diagnosis: why and how do we miss important clues? , 2008, Sexually Transmitted Infections.

[30]  J. Walkup,et al.  The Impact of Mental Health and Substance Abuse Factors on HIV Prevention and Treatment , 2008, Journal of acquired immune deficiency syndromes.

[31]  M. Fisher Late diagnosis of HIV infection: major consequences and missed opportunities. , 2008, Current Opinion in Infectious Diseases.

[32]  J. Nazroo,et al.  Missed opportunities for earlier HIV diagnosis within primary and secondary healthcare settings in the UK , 2008, AIDS.

[33]  C. Sabin,et al.  Late Diagnosis of HIV Infection: Epidemiological Features, Consequences and Strategies to Encourage Earlier Testing , 2007, Journal of acquired immune deficiency syndromes.

[34]  A. Weintrob,et al.  Infrequent diagnosis of primary human immunodeficiency virus infection: missed opportunities in acute care settings. , 2003, Archives of internal medicine.

[35]  S. Shoptaw,et al.  Stimulant abuse treatment as HIV prevention. , 1998, Journal of addictive diseases.

[36]  H. Dermatis,et al.  HIV-related cases among 2,094 admissions to a psychiatric hospital. , 1995, Psychiatric services.

[37]  A. Copas,et al.  Mortality and causes of death in people diagnosed with HIV in the era of highly active antiretroviral therapy compared with the general population: an analysis of a national observational cohort. , 2017, The Lancet. Public health.

[38]  Australian Federation of AIDS Organisations , 2007 .

[39]  Thomas E Novotny,et al.  US Department of Health and Human Services: a need for global health leadership in preparedness and health diplomacy. , 2006, American journal of public health.