eThe use of nucleic acid detection for HIV type 1 (HIV-1) detection is strongly recommended in infants <18 months of age, in whom serology is unreliable. This study evaluated the Cobas AmpliPrep/Cobas TaqMan HIV-1 Qualitative Test v2.0 (TaqMan HIV-1 Qual Test, v2.0), a dual-target total nucleic acid real-time PCR assay. The limit of detection (LOD) of the new test in plasma and dried blood spots (DBS) was determined with the 2nd International HIV-1 RNA WHO standard. The specificity of the assay was tested with EDTA plasma (n ؍ 1,301) and DBS from HIV-negative adults (n ؍ 1,000). The sensitivity was determined using HIV-1-positive samples (n ؍ 169 adult EDTA plasma, n ؍ 172 adult DBS, and n ؍ 100 infant DBS) that included group M, subtypes A to H, CRF01_AE, CRF02_AG, and groups O and N. All positive specimens and a subset of the negative specimens were also tested with the Abbott RealTime HIV-1 Qual assay (RealTime). The LOD of the TaqMan assay was 20 copies/ml in plasma and 300 copies/ml in DBS, with specificities of 99.8% in plasma and 99.9% in DBS. The TaqMan . Although access to early infant diagnosis of HIV is improving, in 2011 only 35% of infants born to HIV-positive mothers were tested within 2 months of birth (1). The Joint United Nations Programme on HIV/AIDS (UNAIDS) call for action has set new targets for 2020, the first of which is for 90% of those infected with HIV to know their status. Improved assays like the one evaluated in this study should assist in increasing access to HIV diagnosis, particularly in a vulnerable pediatric population that requires nucleic acid-based testing (2). Transmission of HIV occurs through sexual contact, exposure to infected blood products (3), and vertical mother-to-child transmission (4). For many infected infants, the progression of AIDS is rapid, and thus, early antiretroviral therapy is crucial for survival. In a randomized, controlled clinical trial in South Africa, it was demonstrated that early HIV diagnosis and early antiretroviral therapy could reduce early infant mortality by 76% and slow HIV progression by 75% (5). Access to HIV testing and early confirmation of a pediatric infection are thus critical for immediate access to treatment and care programs. Nucleic acid testing is particularly important for early diagnosis of infants Յ18 months of age. In this population, serologic tests are unreliable for the identification of true virologic status, because passively transferred maternal HIV type 1 (HIV-1) antibodies may be detectable in the HIV-exposed infant for up to 18 months of life (6) or longer in some instances (7). Thus, the World Health Organization (WHO) strongly recommends that HIV virological testing be used to diagnose HIV infections in infants and children below 18 months of age (8). The regions that are most severely affected by the HIV epidemic, such as sub-Saharan Africa, are often faced with severe resource constraints limiting access to virological testing. The difficulties of cold-chain transfer of collected blood samples from ...