Screening for HIV: A Review of the Evidence for the U.S. Preventive Services Task Force
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Figure. Key Question ( ) 1: Does screening for HIV infection in asymptomatic adolescents and adults reduce premature death
and disability or spread of disease? KQ 2: Can clinical or demographic characteristics (including specific settings) identify
subgroups of asymptomatic adolescents and adults at increased risk for HIV compared to the general population? KQ 3: What
are the test characteristics of HIV antibody test strategies? KQ 4: What are the harms (including labeling and anxiety) associated
with screening? Is screening acceptable to patients? KQ 5: How many newly diagnosed HIV-positive patients meet criteria for
antiretroviral treatment or prophylaxis against opportunistic infections? How many patients who meet criteria for interventions
receive them? KQ 6: What are the harms associated with the work-up for HIV infection? KQ 7: a) How effective are interventions
(antiretroviral treatment, counseling on risky behaviors, immunizations, routine monitoring and follow-up, more frequent Papanicolaou
testing, or prophylaxis against opportunistic infections) in improving clinical outcomes (mortality, functional status, quality
of life, symptoms, opportunistic infections, or transmission rates)? b) In asymptomatic patients with HIV infection, does
immediate antiretroviral treatment result in improvements in clinical outcomes compared to delayed treatment until the patient
is symptomatic? c) How well do interventions reduce the rate of viremia, improve CD4 counts, or reduce risky behaviors? KQ
8: What are the harms associated with antiretroviral therapy? KQ 9: Have improvements in intermediate outcomes (CD4 counts,
viremia, risky behaviors) been shown to reduce premature death and disability or spread of disease? KQ 10: What is the cost-effectiveness
of screening for HIV infection? *Excluding pregnant women, patients undergoing dialysis, and patients receiving transplants.
A separate report reviews KQs 6, 7c, 9, and portions of 7a (immunizations, routine monitoring and follow-up, and more frequent
Papanicolaou testing). Screening for HIV—analytic framework for screening asymptomatic adolescents and adults.KQ(13)
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Ann Intern Med
July 5, 2005
vol. 143
no. 1
55-73