THURSDAY, June 19 (HealthDay News) -- Due to problems with
false-positive results, the use of an oral rapid HIV test was
recently halted by the New York City Department of Health and
Mental Hygiene, which operates 10 sexually transmitted disease
walk-in clinics.
In January 2004, the clinics introduced on-site, rapid HIV
testing of finger-stick, whole-blood specimens using the OraQuick
test. Then, in March 2005, the clinics replaced the finger-stick
test with an oral fluid test, the OraQuick Advance Rapid HIV-1/2
Antibody Test.
However, beginning in late 2005, the clinics noted an unexpected
increase in false-positive oral test results. This increase
subsided after several months, notes a report released online June
18 in
Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report, published by the U.S.
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
The use of oral fluid tests was suspended for three weeks in
December 2005 and replaced with the finger-stick test while city
health officials investigated the increase in false-positive test
results. The finger-stick tests didn't produce any false-positive
results.
The oral fluid test was re-introduced in late December 2005.
However, any positive result from an oral fluid test had to be
followed up with a finger-stick test.
In late 2007, there was another larger increase in the incidence
of false-positive oral fluid tests. The cause has not been
determined and the city health department has stopped the use of
the oral fluid test. Only the finger-stick test is being used.
"These findings underscore the importance of confirming all
reactive HIV tests, both from oral fluid and whole-blood
specimens," the report authors wrote.
"In addition, the results suggest that the NYC DOHMH strategy of
following up reactive oral fluid test results with an immediate
finger-stick whole-blood test reduced the number of apparent
false-positive oral fluid test results and might be a useful
strategy in other settings and locations," they added.
More information
The U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention has more
about
HIV testing.