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Evidence on Digital HIV Self-Testing From Accuracy to Impact: Updated Systematic Review
by
Pant Pai, Nitika
, Vaikla, Olivia
, Engel, Nora
, Liang, Chen
, Duchaine, Thomas
, Beecroft, Ashlyn
in
Acceptability
/ Accuracy
/ Acquired immune deficiency syndrome
/ AIDS
/ Bias
/ Blood
/ Clinical trials
/ Computer-aided medical diagnosis
/ COVID-19
/ Data
/ Digital health
/ Digital technology
/ Disease
/ FDA approval
/ Feasibility
/ Global health
/ HIV
/ HIV home tests
/ HIV Infections - diagnosis
/ HIV testing
/ Home medical tests
/ Human immunodeficiency virus
/ Humans
/ Income
/ Innovations
/ Medical referrals
/ Medical research
/ Methods
/ Multimedia
/ Novels
/ Observational studies
/ Pandemics
/ Patient-centered care
/ Registration
/ Review
/ Self Care
/ Self-Testing
/ Systematic review
/ Technological change
/ Tests
/ Uptake
2025
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Evidence on Digital HIV Self-Testing From Accuracy to Impact: Updated Systematic Review
by
Pant Pai, Nitika
, Vaikla, Olivia
, Engel, Nora
, Liang, Chen
, Duchaine, Thomas
, Beecroft, Ashlyn
in
Acceptability
/ Accuracy
/ Acquired immune deficiency syndrome
/ AIDS
/ Bias
/ Blood
/ Clinical trials
/ Computer-aided medical diagnosis
/ COVID-19
/ Data
/ Digital health
/ Digital technology
/ Disease
/ FDA approval
/ Feasibility
/ Global health
/ HIV
/ HIV home tests
/ HIV Infections - diagnosis
/ HIV testing
/ Home medical tests
/ Human immunodeficiency virus
/ Humans
/ Income
/ Innovations
/ Medical referrals
/ Medical research
/ Methods
/ Multimedia
/ Novels
/ Observational studies
/ Pandemics
/ Patient-centered care
/ Registration
/ Review
/ Self Care
/ Self-Testing
/ Systematic review
/ Technological change
/ Tests
/ Uptake
2025
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Evidence on Digital HIV Self-Testing From Accuracy to Impact: Updated Systematic Review
by
Pant Pai, Nitika
, Vaikla, Olivia
, Engel, Nora
, Liang, Chen
, Duchaine, Thomas
, Beecroft, Ashlyn
in
Acceptability
/ Accuracy
/ Acquired immune deficiency syndrome
/ AIDS
/ Bias
/ Blood
/ Clinical trials
/ Computer-aided medical diagnosis
/ COVID-19
/ Data
/ Digital health
/ Digital technology
/ Disease
/ FDA approval
/ Feasibility
/ Global health
/ HIV
/ HIV home tests
/ HIV Infections - diagnosis
/ HIV testing
/ Home medical tests
/ Human immunodeficiency virus
/ Humans
/ Income
/ Innovations
/ Medical referrals
/ Medical research
/ Methods
/ Multimedia
/ Novels
/ Observational studies
/ Pandemics
/ Patient-centered care
/ Registration
/ Review
/ Self Care
/ Self-Testing
/ Systematic review
/ Technological change
/ Tests
/ Uptake
2025
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Evidence on Digital HIV Self-Testing From Accuracy to Impact: Updated Systematic Review
Journal Article
Evidence on Digital HIV Self-Testing From Accuracy to Impact: Updated Systematic Review
2025
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Overview
HIV self-testing has gained momentum following the approval of self-testing methods and novel technological advancements. Digital HIV self-testing involves completing an oral or blood-based HIV self-test with support from a digital innovation.
We conducted a systematic review on the existing data analyzing digital HIV self-testing accuracy while updating research on digital HIV self-test acceptability, preference, feasibility, and impact.
We searched Embase and PubMed for records on HIV self-testing with digital support. Included studies significantly incorporated a form of digital innovation throughout the HIV self-test process and reported quantitative data. For accuracy measures, the search spanned January 1, 2013, to October 15, 2024; for patient-centered and impact outcomes, we updated existing literature (June 16, 2021, to October 15, 2024) reported in a previous systematic review. Studies' quality was assessed using the QUADAS 2 Tool, Newcastle-Ottawa Scale, and Cochrane Risk of Bias Tool 2.
Fifty-five studies (samples ranging 120-21,035, median 1267 participants) were summarized from 19 middle- to high-income countries. Seven studies reported on the accuracy of HIV self-testing with innovations from >5000 participants. Diagnostic performance metrics, including point estimates of specificity, sensitivity, positive predictive value, and negative predictive value were measured (n=3), and ranged from: 96.8% to 99.9%, 92.9% to 100.0%, 76.5% to 99.2%, and 99.2% to 100.0%, respectively. The percentage of invalid test results for oral and blood-based self-tests ranged from 0.2% to 12.7% (n=4). Fifty-one studies reported data on metrics beyond accuracy, including acceptability, preference, feasibility, and impact outcomes from >30,000 participants. Majority (38/51, 74.5%) were observational studies, while 25.5% (13/51) reported data from randomized controlled trials. Acceptability and preference outcomes varied from 64.5% to 99.0% (14/51) and 4.6% to 99.3% (8/51), respectively. Feasibility outcomes included test uptake (30.9% to 98.2%; 28/51), response rate (26.0% to 94.8%; 7/51), and visits to web-based providers (43.0% to 70.7%; n=4). Impact outcomes assessed new infections (0.0% to 25.8%; 31/51), first-time testers (2.0% to 53.0%; 26/51), result return proportions (22.1% to 100.0%; 24/51), linkage to care as both connections to confirmatory testing and counseling (53.0% to 100.0%; 16/51), and referrals for treatment initiation (44.4% to 98.1%; 8/51). The quality of studies varied, though they generally demonstrated low risk of bias.
Digital innovations improved the accuracy of HIV self-test results, and were well-accepted and preferred by participants. Operationally, they were found to be feasible and reported impacting the HIV self-testing process. These findings are in favor of the use of digital HIV self-test innovations as a promising support tool and suggest that digital HIV self-tests' service delivery models hold promise in not only facilitating HIV testing but also impacting operational outcomes that are crucial to reaching Joint United Nations Program on HIV/AIDS targets in middle- to high-income countries.
PROSPERO CRD42020205025; https://www.crd.york.ac.uk/prospero/CRD42020205025.
Publisher
Journal of Medical Internet Research,Gunther Eysenbach MD MPH, Associate Professor,JMIR Publications
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