World AIDS Day: World Health Organization Urges Scale-Up of HIV Self-Testing
- Details
- Category: HIV Testing & Diagnosis
- Published on Tuesday, 29 November 2016 00:00
- Written by Roger Pebody

The World Health Organization (WHO) this week launched new guidelines encouraging countries to support self-testing in an effort to get more people to learn their HIV status -- the first step toward getting on effective treatment, achieving viral suppression, halting disease progression, and preventing onward HIV transmission. WHO estimates that only 60% of people with HIV are aware of their status, and says that self-testing can help countries meet the UN target of diagnosing 90% of all people with HIV by 2020.
"Millions of people with HIV are still missing out on life-saving treatment, which can also prevent HIV transmission to others," said WHO Director-General Margaret Chan said in a WHO press release. "HIV self-testing should open the door for many more people to know their HIV status and find out how to get treatment and access prevention services."
[Produced in collaboration with aidsmap.com]
HIV self-testing (sometimes called home testing) should be offered as an additional approach to HIV testing services, WHO recommends in the new guidelines, issued November 29 in advance of World AIDS Day.
HIV self-testing "represents another step in line with efforts to increase patient autonomy, decentralize services, and create demand for HIV testing among those unreached by existing services," says WHO. The organization hopes self-testing may increase testing rates among all men, adolescents, men who have sex with men, and other key populations.
Evidence to support the new guidance comes from 5 randomized controlled trials, including 2 Kenyan studies in which women distributed tests kits to their male partners, and 3 studies of men who have sex with men (MSM) in Australia, China, and the United States. A number of observational studies were also consulted.
Key findings from the randomized studies were that, when compared with HIV testing in health facilities, self-testing increased the uptake of testing by male partners of pregnant women, increased the uptake of couples testing in this group, increased the uptake and frequency of testing by MSM, did not increase risky sexual behavior or sexually transmitted infections (STIs), did not lead to less STI testing, and did not increase intimate partner violence or other social harms.
WHO also conducted a systematic review and meta-analysis of test accuracy. It found that self-testers got as accurate results as trained health workers.
Self-tests using blood samples had a sensitivity (i.e., ability to give accurate results to people who have HIV) ranging from 96.2% to 100%. Blood-based tests had a specificity (i.e., ability to give accurate results to people who do not have HIV) ranging from 99.5% to 100%. For tests using oral fluid samples, sensitivity ranged from 80% to 100% and specificity ranged from 95.1% to 100%. While this is a little less accurate, WHO does not recommend one form of test over another.
However, WHO does clearly state that any self-test used must be approved by the relevant regulatory authority. At present, only 4 tests have a CE mark for sale in Europe (BioSure, autotest VIH, INSTI, and OraQuick), and only 1 test is approved by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (OraQuick). No test is yet pre-qualified by WHO, indicating that a test meets global standards for quality, safety and efficacy, but evaluation of a number of devices has begun.
The guidelines leave plenty of scope for countries and programs to identify the best ways to distribute self-tests. Self-testing should aim to fill gaps in current coverage of HIV testing. It should reach people at high risk for HIV who do not use existing testing services often enough.
Distribution might be door-to-door, delivered by a person’s sexual partner, distributed in healthcare facilities, integrated with outreach for other health programs (such as male circumcision or tuberculosis screening), through workplace health programs, or distributed in commercial pharmacies, online, or through vending machines.
Clear instructions for how to use a self-test and interpret the result must be provided. These may be provided through written, pictorial, and video instructions and also remote support (e.g., a telephone hotline or online support). In some low-literacy settings it may be appropriate for self-testing to be "assisted" by a healthcare or outreach worker who can demonstrate the process and be present while a person does the test.
Clear messages are needed to describe what to do if the result is "reactive" (potentially positive), WHO says. Users must understand that a reactive test result must be confirmed through further testing and should be given details of the services they can go to for this.
WHO acknowledge gaps in the evidence base on strategies to promote linkage to care after self-testing. Proactive follow-up by peer or outreach workers may be appropriate, especially if the test was "assisted." Studies suggest that allowing people to initiate HIV treatment at home (i.e., being visited by a counselor at home and having medication delivered there) is effective. Phone hotlines, video counseling, appointment cards, and vouchers to cover transport costs may also help improve linkage to care.
Clear messages are also needed so that people getting negative test results understand that the result is not definitive, especially if the person’s last possible exposure to HIV was within the test’s window period. In the light of this, "HIV self-test results should not be used to serosort or to justify HIV risk behavior such as condomless sex following a negative self-test result." WHO says this advice is particularly relevant in communities where the rate of new infections is high, for example in most groups of gay men.
Information should be provided on disclosure, in particular to help couples cope with serodiscordant self-test results. Information on services to help with domestic abuse and intimate partner violence should be included. Self-testing is not recommended for couples in which abuse or violence is already a problem.
WHO says that many countries will need to adapt their national policies and regulations, so that HIV self-tests can be legally sold or distributed, people who are not healthcare workers can perform a test, and devices can be approved by regulatory authorities. Age of consent laws may need to be modified to allow adolescents to self-test for HIV. Laws and policies that address misuse (such as coercive testing and violence) may also need to be adapted.
11/29/16
Sources
World Health Organization. Guidelines on HIV self-testing and partner notification: supplement to consolidated guidelines on HIV testing services. December 2016.
World Health Organization. Policy brief: WHO recommends HIV self-testing. December 2016.
World Health Organization. WHO issues new guidance on HIV self-testing ahead of World AIDS Day. Press release. November 29, 2016.