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HIV BY PCR (Viral Load / Quantitation)

Specimen Required

6cc EDTA Blood (2 CBC Vials)

Fasting Required

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Purpose of the Test

To monitor the status of HIV 1 disease in conjunction with other lab tests and physical disease progression and to guide therapy. Your viral load levels are usually used as an indicator of how well your immune system is dealing with HIV. If you are on anti-HIV treatments, it can be an indicator of how well the treatments are working.

When this test is required

A viral load test is requested, usually in conjunction with a CD count, when a patient is first diagnosed with HIV 1. The test result functions as a baseline measurement that shows how actively the virus is reproducing. Your doctor may request a viral load test and a CD4 count about every four weeks to evaluate whether therapy is being effective. To monitor long-term therapy, your doctor will request viral load tests and CD4 counts about every four months.

What the Test Detects

There are two distinct types of HIV but the vast majority of infections circulating in the world are HIV type 1 (HIV 1). This test measures the amount of HIV 1 in your blood. This test detects and/or measures the amount (viral load) of RNA (ribonucleic acid) of the human immunodeficiency virus 1 (HIV 1) in blood. It is the virus that causes acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS). When a person is infected with HIV 1, the virus…There are two distinct types of HIV but the vast majority of infections circulating in the world are HIV type 1 (HIV 1). This test measures the amount of HIV 1 in your blood. This test detects and/or measures the amount (viral load) of RNA (ribonucleic acid) of the human immunodeficiency virus 1 (HIV 1) in blood. It is the virus that causes acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS). When a person is infected with HIV 1, the virus replicates—it produces more and more copies of itself—and moves into the lymph nodes, spleen, and other parts of the body. In the early stages of infection there may not be any noticeable signs or symptoms of disease or only flu-like symptoms, although the virus is usually present in high amounts. Even when there are no symptoms the virus continues to replicate and to damage or kill immune cells. Eventually, the immune system is so weakened that the disease begins to affect the body’s ability to fight infections and certain cancers. More symptoms begin to appear at this stage as the body becomes more susceptible to infections with microorganisms such as tuberculosis and fungi or other diseases such as Kaposi’s sarcoma. There is still concern that there is a lot of virus in other places in the body, not just the blood – only 2% of HIV 1 is circulating in the blood, the rest is in the lymph system and other body tissue . Early results indicate that changes in viral load in the blood are mirrored in the lymph system, but research into this is continuing. “Viral load” means the number of HIV particles or copies of the virus present in the blood. About 3-8 weeks (rarely up to six months) after exposure to the virus, the body begins to produce HIV antibodies in response to the infection. These antibodies can be detected with a screening test to determine if you have been infected with HIV. However, if your exposure occurred within the last few weeks, the level of antibody may not be high enough to be detected. It is in this “window period” of more recent exposure that the virus may be detectable with an HIV 1 RNA test (viral load) to determine your HIV 1 status. Because the level of technology and resources needed to perform this test are high, it is not as widely available as the antibody test and is used infrequently for diagnosis. As HIV infection progresses the virus continues to replicate and the number of copies of virus, the “viral load”, in the blood increases. If you have been diagnosed with HIV, the measurement of an HIV 1 viral load (HIV 1 RNA) gives your doctor a general indication of how much HIV is present in the body, and how rapidly the virus is replicating. The test can help determine, when to test for drug resistance or if a different type of treatment protocol is needed. Treatment with anti-viral agents can decrease the viral load in the blood to low or undetectable levels, but cannot fully eradicate it from the body. Current guidance recommends that treatment is initiated as soon as a diagnosis of HIV 1 infection is made. How is the sample collected for testing? A blood sample is taken by needle from a vein in your arm. Is any test preparation needed to ensure the quality of the sample? No test preparation is needed. See MoreSee Less

Preparation for the Test

No test preparation is needed.

Sample Requirements

A blood sample taken from a vein in your arm

Additional Notes

Normally viral load testing is not be used for diagnosing HIV 1; the HIV 1&2 antibody/antigen test is still the preferred method of choice for this. However, in cases where the antibody/antigen test is indeterminate or where you have been exposed and you are showing signs that you may be acutely infected, your clinician may request a viral load.