Assessment of antibody assays for identifying and distinguishing recent from long-term HIV type 1 infection.

2001 
We evaluated 16 antibody assays for their performance in discriminating recent from established HIV-1 infection. These approaches were based on antigen specificity, quantity, conformation dependence, and avidity/affinity of HIV-specific antibodies. A panel of 41 sera from subjects who had seroconverted in the previous 2-6 months (n = 20) and from subjects with established infection (>1 year, n = 21) were run in each assay. Compared with anti-Gag and anti-Pol responses, quantitative anti-Env antibody levels were initially lower and ultimately higher, resulting in the greatest spread and least overlap between incident and established infection. Quantitative measurement included end-point titer in Western blot, end-point titer or response at a given dilution in solid-phase enzyme immunoassays (EIAs) with recombinant proteins or synthetic peptides, and IgG capture assays that reflect the relative proportion of IgG that is anti-HIV antibody. Focusing on the anti-env response, we measured specific responses to ...
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