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An
Inexpensive, Simple and Manual Method for Quantitation of CD4 T-Cells
for Use in Developing Countries
CD4+
T lymphocytes are currently the most common surrogate
marker indicating immune status and disease progression
with HIV infection. The cost of monitoring disease progression and
response to therapy is still prohibitively expensive.
Flow
cytometry is the gold standard for the estimation of CD4+ count, but
the high initial investment for this technology and expensive reagents
makes it unaffordable for developing countries
like India.
Researchers
evaluated the Coulter cytosphere assay for quantifying CD4+ T lymphocytes
in comparison with the standard method, flow cytometry, in 122 HIV-infected
individuals.
The
correlation coefficient of the cytosphere assay compared with that
of flow cytometry for CD4+ T lymphocytes was 0.97 (P< 0.0001),
with a confidence interval of 0.95 to 0.98.
The
sensitivity, specificity, positive predictive value, and negative
predictive value of the cytosphere assay in enumerating absolute
CD4+ T-lymphocyte counts of less than 200/[mu]L were 94.9%, 96.4%,
92.5%, and 97.6%, respectively.
This
is a simple inexpensive method and has a strong correlation with
flow cytometry.
In
conclusion, the authors write, “The cytosphere assay can be an alternate
to flow cytometry for the estimation of CD4+ T-lymphocyte counts,
especially in resource-poor settings of developing countries, for
monitoring HIV progression and response to therapy.”
08/13/04
Reference
P
Balakrishnan and others. An Inexpensive, Simple, and Manual Method
of CD4 T-Cell Quantitation in HIV-Infected Individuals for Use in
Developing Countries.
Journal of Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndromes 36(5): 1006-1010,
August 15, 2004.
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