Background: Pooled testing, or pooling, has been used for decades to efficiently diagnose relatively rare conditions, such as infection in blood donors. Programmes for the prevention of mother-to-child transmission of HIV and for antiretroviral therapy (ART) are being rolled out in much of Africa and are largely successful. This increases the need for early infant diagnosis (EID) of HIV using qualitative nucleic acid testing and for virological monitoring of patients on ART using viral load testing. While numbers of patients needing testing are increasing, infant HIV infections and ART failures are becoming rarer, opening an opportunity for pooled testing approaches
In the absence of early infant diagnosis (EID) and immediate antiretroviral therapy (ART), some 50% ...
Point-of-Care (POC) molecular assays improve HIV infant diagnosis and viral load (VL) quantification...
Introduction Early infant diagnosis (EID) and prompt linkage to care are critical to minimise the hi...
CITATION: Van Schalkwyk, C., et al. 2019. Pooled PCR testing of dried blood spots for infant HIV dia...
Abstract Background Access to qualitative HIV PCRs for early infant diagnosis (EID) is restricted in...
CITATION: Dowling, W., et al. 2018. HIV-1 RNA testing of pooled dried blood spots is feasible to dia...
In Tanzania, less than a third of HIV infected children estimated to be in need of antiretroviral th...
Thesis (PhD)--University of Pretoria, 2018.More than 280 000 HIV-exposed infants are born each year ...
Abstract Background: Pooling strategies have been used to reduce the costs of polymerase chain react...
This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution Licen...
Background: In Tanzania, less than a third of HIV infected children estimated to be in need of antir...
More than 280 000 HIV-exposed infants are born each year in South Africa (SA), all of whom require p...
Background: In Tanzania, less than a third of HIV infected children estimated to be in need of antir...
BackgroundPooled viral load (VL) testing with two different testing strategies was evaluated as a po...
Abstract Background In Tanzania, less than a third of HIV infected children estimated to be in need ...
In the absence of early infant diagnosis (EID) and immediate antiretroviral therapy (ART), some 50% ...
Point-of-Care (POC) molecular assays improve HIV infant diagnosis and viral load (VL) quantification...
Introduction Early infant diagnosis (EID) and prompt linkage to care are critical to minimise the hi...
CITATION: Van Schalkwyk, C., et al. 2019. Pooled PCR testing of dried blood spots for infant HIV dia...
Abstract Background Access to qualitative HIV PCRs for early infant diagnosis (EID) is restricted in...
CITATION: Dowling, W., et al. 2018. HIV-1 RNA testing of pooled dried blood spots is feasible to dia...
In Tanzania, less than a third of HIV infected children estimated to be in need of antiretroviral th...
Thesis (PhD)--University of Pretoria, 2018.More than 280 000 HIV-exposed infants are born each year ...
Abstract Background: Pooling strategies have been used to reduce the costs of polymerase chain react...
This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution Licen...
Background: In Tanzania, less than a third of HIV infected children estimated to be in need of antir...
More than 280 000 HIV-exposed infants are born each year in South Africa (SA), all of whom require p...
Background: In Tanzania, less than a third of HIV infected children estimated to be in need of antir...
BackgroundPooled viral load (VL) testing with two different testing strategies was evaluated as a po...
Abstract Background In Tanzania, less than a third of HIV infected children estimated to be in need ...
In the absence of early infant diagnosis (EID) and immediate antiretroviral therapy (ART), some 50% ...
Point-of-Care (POC) molecular assays improve HIV infant diagnosis and viral load (VL) quantification...
Introduction Early infant diagnosis (EID) and prompt linkage to care are critical to minimise the hi...