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New Mexico AIDS InfoNet Fact Sheet Number 413

VIRAL LOAD TESTS


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WHAT IS VIRAL LOAD?

The viral load test measures the amount of HIV virus in your

blood. There are different techniques for doing this:

  • The PCR (polymerase chain reaction)

    test uses an enzyme to multiply the HIV in the blood sample.

    Then a chemical reaction marks the virus. The markers are measured

    and used to calculate the amount of virus. Roche produces this

    test.

  • The bDNA (branched DNA) test combines

    a material that gives off light with the sample. This material

    connects with the HIV particles. The amount of light is measured

    and converted to a viral count. Chiron produces this test.

The PCR test results are often different from the bDNA results

for the same sample. Because the tests are different, you should

stick with the same kind of test (PCR or bDNA) to measure your

viral load over time.

Viral loads are usually reported as copies of HIV in one milliliter

of blood. The tests count up to about 1.5 million copies, and

are always being improved to be more sensitive. The first bDNA

test measured down to 10,000 copies. The second generation could

detect as few as 500 copies. Now there are ultra sensitive tests

that can detect less than 5 copies.

The best viral load test result is “undetectable”.

This does not mean that there is no virus in your blood; it just

means that there is not enough for the test to find and count.

With the first generation test, “undetectable” could

mean 9,999 copies. “Undetectable” depends on the sensitivity

of the test used on your blood sample.


HOW IS THE TEST

USED?

The viral load test is helpful in several areas:

  • In basic science, the test has been used to prove

    that HIV is never “latent” but is always multiplying.

    Many people with no symptoms of AIDS and high T-cell

    counts also had high viral loads. If the virus was latent,

    the test wouldn’t have found any HIV in the blood.

  • The test can be used for diagnosis, because it can

    detect a viral load at any time after HIV infection. This is

    better than the standard HIV (antibody) test, which can be “negative”

    after HIV infection and before the development of antibodies

    (See Fact Sheet 102 for

    more information on HIV antibody

    testing).

  • For prognosis, viral load can help predict how long

    someone will stay healthy. The higher the viral load, the faster

    HIV disease progresses.

  • Finally, the viral load test is valuable for managing

    therapy, to see if antiviral drugs are controlling the virus.

    Current guidelines suggest measuring baseline (pre-treatment)

    viral load. A drug is “working” if it lowers viral

    load by at least 90% within 8 weeks. The viral load should continue

    to drop to less than 50 copies within 6 months. The viral load

    should be measured within 2 to 8 weeks after treatment is started

    or changed, and every 3 to 4 months after that.


HOW ARE CHANGES

IN VIRAL LOAD MEASURED?

Repeat tests of the same blood sample can give results that

vary by a factor of 3. This means that a meaningful change would

be a drop to less than 1/3 or an increase to more than

3 times the previous test result. For example, a change from

200,000 to 600,000 is within the normal variability of the test.

A drop from 50,000 to 10,000 would be significant. The most important

change is to reach an undetectable viral load.

Viral load changes are often described as “log” changes.

This refers to scientific notation, which uses powers of 10. For

example, a 2-log drop is a drop of 102 or 100 times. A drop from

60,000 to 600 would be a 2-log drop.


WHAT DO THE NUMBERS

MEAN?

There are no “magic” numbers for viral loads. We

don’t know how long you’ll stay healthy with any particular viral

load. We don’t know if 150,000 is twice as bad as 75,000. All

we know so far is that lower is better and seems to mean a longer,

healthier life.

US treatment guidelines (See

Fact Sheet 411) suggest that anyone with a viral load over

55,000 should be offered treatment.

Some people may think that if their viral load is undetectable,

they can’t pass the HIV virus to another person. THIS IS NOT

TRUE. There is no “safe” level of viral load. Although

the risk is less, you can pass HIV to another person even if your

viral load is undetectable.


ARE THERE PROBLEMS

WITH THE VIRAL LOAD TEST?

There are some concerns with the viral load test:

  • Only about 2% of the HIV in your body is in the blood. The

    viral load test does not measure how much HIV is in body tissues

    like the lymph nodes, spleen, or brain. HIV levels in lymph tissue

    and semen go down when blood levels go down, but not at the same

    time or the same rate.

  • The viral load test results can be thrown off if your body

    is fighting an infection, or if you have just received an immunization

    (like a flu shot). You should not have blood taken for a viral

    load test within four weeks of any infection or immunization.


Revised March 6, 2002

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