HIV tests during the window period
Last edited 03/2018
HIV tests during the window period
British Association for Sexual Health and HIV (BASHH)/ /Expert Advisory Group on AIDS (EAGA) statement on HIV window period:
- accredited diagnostic laboratories in the UK use "fourth generation
" tests for HIV. These test for HIV antibodies and p24 antigen simultaneously
in venous samples, and will detect the great majority of individuals who have
been infected with HIV at 4 weeks after exposure
- patients attending for HIV testing who identify a specific risk occurring
less than 4 weeks previously should not be made to wait before HIV testing
as doing so may miss an opportunity to diagnose HIV (in particular acute HIV
infection during which a person is highly infectious). They should be offered
a laboratory "fourth generation " HIV test on a venous sample and
be advised to repeat it when 4 weeks have elapsed from the time of the last
exposure
- a negative result on a fourth generation test performed at 4 weeks post-exposure
is highly likely to exclude HIV infection. A further test at 8 weeks need
only be considered following an event assessed as carrying a high risk of
infection
- patients at ongoing risk of HIV infection should be advised to retest at
regular intervals
- patients should be advised to have tests for other sexually transmitted infections in line with advice on window periods for those infections (1)
Reference: