Madrid
: Spain’s top research institution
said it has patented an HIV test that can detect the AIDS-causing virus within
a week of infection, the fastest yet.
A
“biosensor” developed by scientists of the Spanish National Research Council
(CSIC) detects the p24 antigen, a protein attached to the HIV virus, in human
blood, the council said in a statement.
The
technology “detects the protein at concentrations 100,000 times lower than in
current techniques,” it said, and “during the first week after infection.”
“In
addition, the total test time is four hours, 45 minutes, meaning clinical
results could be obtained on the same day.”
The
outcome of tests with the sensor was published this week in the science journal
PLOS ONE.
The
sensor is a rice grain-sized chip combining micro-mechanical silicon structures
and gold nanoparticles.
Its
ingredients are manufactured using existing technology, “thus making
large-scale, low-cost production possible,” CSIC researcher Javier Tamayo said
a statement.
“This,
combined with its simplicity, could make it a great choice for use in
developing countries” hardest-hit by the scourge of HIV.
Current
antigen tests can detect HIV only about three weeks after infection. Tests that
pick up HIV antibodies in the blood require an even longer wait.
RNA
tests can detect the virus directly after about 10 days, but are more
expensive.
Early
detection is crucial to stop an infected person unknowingly passing the virus
on to other people through sex.
According
to the World Health Organization, there were about 36.7 million people living
with HIV in 2015, mainly in low- and middle-income countries.
An
estimated 2.1 million people were infected in 2015.
Some
35 million people have died from HIV-related causes, including 1.1 million in
2015.
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