Background
To investigate the prevalence of undiagnosed HIV infections in an emergency department (ED) with an established screening program.
Methods
Evaluation of the prevalence and risk factors for HIV from an 8-week (6/24/2007 – 8/18/2007) identity-unlinked HIV serosurvey, conducted at the same time as an ongoing opt-in rapid oral-fluid HIV screening program. Testing facilitators offering 24/7 bedside rapid testing to patients aged 18–64 years, with concordant collection of excess sera collected as part of routine clinical procedures. Known HIV positivity was determined by (1) chart review or self-report from the screening program, and/or (2) presence of antiretrovirals in serum specimens.
Results
Among 3,207 patients, 1,165 (36.3%) patients were offered an HIV test. Among those offered, 567 (48.7%) consented to testing. Concordance identity-unlinked study revealed that the prevalence of undiagnosed infections was: 2.3% in all patients; 1.0% in those offered testing versus 3.0% in those not offered testing (p<0.001); and 1.3% in those who declined testing compared to 0.4% in those who were tested (p=0.077). Higher median viral loads were observed in those not offered testing (14,255 copies/mL, IQR: 1,147 – 64,354) versus those offered testing (1,865 copies/mL, IQR: undetectable – 21,786) but the difference was not statistically significant.
Conclusions
High undiagnosed HIV prevalence was observed in ED patients who were not offered HIV testing and those who declined testing, compared to those who were tested. This indicates that even with an intensive facilitator-based rapid HIV screening model, significant missed opportunities remain with regard to identifying undiagnosed infections in the ED.