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Background
More
than 35 million people in developing countries are living
with HIV infection. An enormous global effort is now underway
to bring antiretroviral treatment to at least 3 million of
those infected. While drug prices have dropped considerably,
the cost and technical complexity of laboratory tests essential
for the management of HIV disease, such as CD4
cell counts, remain prohibitive. New, simple, and affordable
methods for measuring CD4 cells that can be implemented in
resource-scarce settings are urgently needed.
Methods and Findings
We developed a prototype for a simple, rapid, and
affordable method for counting
CD4 lymphocytes. Microliter volumes of blood without further
sample preparation
are stained with fluorescent antibodies, captured on a
membrane within a miniaturized flow cell and imaged through
microscope optics with the type of charge-coupled device developed
for digital camera technology. An associated computer algorithm
converts the raw digital image into absolute
CD4 counts and CD4 percentages in real time. The accuracy
of this prototype
system was validated through testing in the United States
and Botswana, and showed close agreement with standard flow
cytometry (r = 0.95) over a range of absolute CD4 counts,
and the ability to discriminate clinically relevant CD4 count
thresholds with high sensitivity and specificity.
Conclusion
Advances in the adaptation of new technologies to
biomedical detection systems, such as the one described here,
promise to make complex diagnostics for HIV and other infectious
diseases a practical global reality.
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