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Advances in Dermatology and Allergology/Postępy Dermatologii i Alergologii
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Diagnosis, clinical assessment of HIV infection in a pregnant woman and legal aspects of HIV infection

Czesław Żaba
,
Maciej Osiński

Postep Derm Alergol 2012; XXIX, 4: 299-307
Online publish date: 2012/09/23
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Diagnosis

Diagnosis of HIV infections, which is of interest for several branches of medicine, includes tests linked to screening studies (manifesting high sensitivity), used, e.g. in transfusiology and studies of a high specificity, inseparably linked to the clinic of HIV infection/AIDS and branches such as infectious diseases or venereology.

Currently, infection with blood-derived preparations is practically impossible [1]. Screening tests targeted at HIV represent a routine procedure, used to estimate suitability of a given blood donation for transfusion. They include serological tests aimed at detection of HIV-1/2-specific antibodies and tests based on molecular biology techniques, aimed to detect HIV RNA [2]. In order to diagnose HIV infection two serum samples should be isolated from a single blood drawing in a given patient. Subsequently, screening tests are conducted, including EIA (enzyme immunoassay). Negative results of EIA are not further verified. The exception involves the situation in which a test can be suspected to be performed within the so-called serological window or during the period of recent infection, when antibodies have not been produced yet and, therefore, the serological tests give falsely negative results. In the latter case, the serological tests should be repeated after 2 weeks and tests of a higher sensitivity should be taken into account (e.g. tests for presence of viral nucleic acids, HIV DNA, HIV RNA). A positive result of EIA in a single sample requires confirmation using the other sample. In the case of contradictory results, the screening test should be repeated and when both samples yield positive results, a verification test should be performed. If both screening tests and the verification test yield positive results, HIV infection can be diagnosed (since the serum contains HIV-specific antibodies) [1].

Establishment of a correct diagnosis in cases of newborns, infants and children exposed to HIV-1 infection is difficult since HIV-specific antibodies penetrate through placenta to foetal blood, in which they may persist for a long time [3]. Therefore, serological tests in children below 18 months of life may be falsely positive and cannot be considered the final, definitive and confirming test. Thus, diagnosis of HIV infection in children below

18 months of life should be based on tests directly detecting presence of the virus or its components (e.g. HIV RNA, HIV DNA or a very sensitive test for presence of p24 antigen) confirmed by another virological test on a sample obtained from independent blood sampling at the time more than 4 weeks after birth [4].

Every woman who is pregnant or plans pregnancy should be tested for HIV. In countries such as Great Britain, France or the Netherlands, the tests are performed in around 98% of pregnant women, in Poland, they cover slightly less than 10% of pregnant women only [5].

Medical personnel's knowledge of biology of mother-to-child HIV transmission is also an important factor [6] HIV infection is frequently accompanied by other STI (sexual transmitted infections) such a C. trachomatis infection, which may be transmitted vertically [7, 8].

An HIV-infected pregnant woman should be subjected to control of HIV viral load in blood (VL) and of the number of CD4+ cells in blood three times during pregnancy with the last tests performed in the 36th week of pregnancy. In cases when the woman became infected by a partner infected with a drug-resistant strain, the treatment proves to be insufficient or ineffective, drug resistance of the virus should be examined [5].

A very sensitive method for detection of HIV presence was found to involve PCR (polymerase chain reaction), a test capable of detecting even very low amounts of nucleic acids. If in the 48th h of newborn's life the test yields a positive result (pointing to presence of the pathogen) the infection took place inside the uterus, when the result of the test is negative in the 48th h but positive between the 7th and 90th day the infection developed most probably during delivery [9].

Cytometric measurement of lymphocytes T CD4+ and of lymphocytes T CD8+ numbers is of a key importance for the patient's prognosis and for the decision on ART implementation. In line with current recommendations, patients with a number of lymphocytes T CD4(+) < 350/µl should undergo antiretroviral treatment [10].

Recent studies demonstrated that the total number of lymphocytes CD4(+) achieved following application of HAART is markedly dependent on both lymphocytes T number determined as soon as possible following seroconversion (the so-called baseline CD4 level) and the lowest lymphocyte T level noted in the patient anytime in the past (the so-called CD4 nadir). Moreover, the baseline CD4 remains directly related to the post-HAART number of lymphocytes CD4, independently of the other prognostically significant variables (e.g. CD4 nadir). In other words, the more lymphocytes are contained in the patient's blood at the moment of seroconversion, the more favourable is his/her prognosis. The quoted reports imply that the baseline CD4 level is of a prognostically important significance for a patient’s therapy [11].

Management of an HIV(+) pregnant woman depends mainly on her blood lymphocyte CD4+ number and on the degree of clinical advancement. The management was specified by WHO recommendations [4] (Table 1).

Legal and medical aspects of HIV infection and AIDS diagnosis

Due to their specificity, problems linked to infection with HIV and with acquired immune deficiency syndrome (AIDS) are not simple and continue to pose several difficulties of a legal and medical type for physicians. Most of the doubts are related to problems associated with the patient’s rights to autonomy and to definition of secrecy limits related to results of performed studies. Problems of the patient's rights form a significant portion of medical law and within recent years were subject to several alterations, updates and modifications. Every physician who provides health care is obliged to know rights of patients while related ignorance or behaviour violating the legal rules exposes the physician to penal, civil or professional liability [17-20].

Isolation of a blood sample from a patient and its testing for presence of HIV infection results in encroachment into the patient's privacy area, which is legally protected by various regulations.

Under the principal act, the Constitution of the Republic of Poland of 2 April 1997 (Journal of Laws No. 78, item 483, as amended) every citizen has right to have his health protected (Art. 68.1), and also has a guaranteed right to self-estimation, privacy and decisions related to his/her fate (Art. 41 “Personal inviolability and security shall be ensured to everyone.”) [21].

The problem is also regulated by the Penal Code in its Art. 192: “whoever performs a therapeutic procedure with no consent of the patient will be liable to a penalty of a fine, restriction of freedom or imprisonment”. Also the Code of Medical Ethics in its Art. 15 indicates that “a diagnostic, therapeutic and preventive procedure requires consent of the patient” [22, 23].

Furthermore, the Act on Patients' Rights and on Advocate for Patients' Rights provides that the patient has the right to have his/her intimacy and dignity respected, to express his/her consent to provision of specified healthcare services and refuse such consent following obtaining information on his/her health condition. A medical procedure performed in the absence of patient's consent or when the consent is improper, even if the procedure was performed correctly from the medical point of view, represents an illegal action. Patient's consent can be revoked at any time before the start of the medical procedure. The above legal acts belong to the patient's autonomy [24].

Analysis of legal regulations indicates that the diagnosis of HIV infection can be established only upon patient's consent. A visit to a physician's office cannot be and is not equivalent to patient's acceptance of a suggested diagnosis and treatment. The patient admitted to a hospital upon preliminary examination in the admission office affixes his/her signature in the history of a disease, concluded with the following statement: “I agree to the treatment and operative procedure suggested to me”. Such an agreement of the patient, the so-called formal consent, represents no agreement to the operative procedure or respective examination procedures of a higher than average risk. Patient’s consent provided upon admission to a hospital does not cover subsequent procedures.

Blood sampling for examination of anti-HIV antibodies fails to pose a direct risk to the patient’s health but, due to the specific type of the diagnosis, it should not be covered by the general consent of the patient before examination and treatment [25-30].

The principal normative rules related to management in cases of suspicion of or diagnosis of infection with HIV are provided in the Act on Prevention and Combating Infections and Infectious Diseases in Humans of 5 December 2008 (Journal of Laws No. 234, item 1570), the Act on Patients’ Rights and Advocate for Patients’ Rights of

6 November 2008 (Journal of Laws of 2009 No. 52, item 17), and the Council of Ministers’ regulation of 15 February 2011 on the National Programme for Prevention against HIV Infections and Combating AIDS [24, 31, 32].

Diagnosis

In the diagnosis of infection with HIV, two categories of tests are distinguished: compulsory tests, voluntary tests.



Compulsory diagnostic tests



Such tests are performed regardless of the patient’s consent or even against the patient’s will. Such tests are conducted in cases of prevention and combating of infectious diseases. Infections with human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) and the acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS) were classified as infections and infectious diseases within legal meaning with all its consequences. The tests are controlled by the Act of Prevention and Combating Infections and Infectious Diseases in Humans of

5 December 2008 [31].

In the discussed respect, its Art. 5.1 is of a decisive significance as it stipulates that individuals staying in the Republic of Poland are obliged to undergo sanitary/epidemiological tests, including procedures aimed at sampling or securing material for such tests.

In line with Art. 6 of that Act, individuals obliged to undergo sanitary/epidemiological tests include:

• Individuals suspected of being infected/infecting with an infectious disease (HIV or AIDS; an individual

suspected of AIDS is a person manifesting clinical signs/symptoms or deviations from a normal condition in laboratory studies which may indicate AIDS; an individual suspected of being infected is a person who does not manifest signs/symptoms of HIV infection or AIDS but who had contact with a source of infection and the type of infectious agent or circumstances of the contact justify the suspicion of the infection);

• Newborns, infants and pregnant women, suspected of infection or an infectious disease (HIV or AIDS), which might spread from mother to her foetus or a child;

• Carriers, convalescents and persons who were exposed to infection due to their contact with infected individuals, AIDS patients or the infectious material. In the above-mentioned cases, the individuals are referred for tests by a regional state sanitary inspector, appropriate for the place of stay of the individual to be tested;

• Pupils, students and PhD students trained to perform occupations with the potential for transmission of HIV infection or AIDS to other persons. They are referred for such tests by a director/vice-chancellor of the school or a person authorized by him/her;

• Persons undertaking or performing work with a potential for passing HIV infection or AIDS to other persons. Such persons are referred for tests by their employer or principal.

Art. 33 of the Act indicates that in cases of suspected HIV infection or AIDS, a state regional sanitary inspector may order, by an administrative decision, immediate performance of compulsory testing etc. of the suspected individual or person in whom the infection or the disease has been diagnosed, as specified by Art. 5.

Blood donors who voluntarily donate blood, even in the absence of their clear consent to blood sampling for purposes of diagnosis of HIV infection, are also tested for HIV infection. In order to voluntarily donate blood, a person has to be healthy, which is linked to systematic testing [26, 27].

Newborns of mothers who did not undergo HIV tests in the course of their pregnancy due to their refusal, are tested for HIV after informing the mother about it. Such a testing is treated as a routine procedure, similarly as e.g. in phenylketonuria. The procedure follows the recommendation of the Polish Gynaecological Society related to prevention of HIV perinatal transmission of 24 October 2008 [5].

Regulations of penal law provide for situations in which obligatory tests can be performed. In a penal process, a defendant, as specified in Art. 74 of the Code of Penal Proceedings, is obliged to undergo psychological and psychiatric examinations and examinations linked to performance of procedures on his/her body except for surgery. Nevertheless, if performance of such studies is indispensable, the procedures have to be conducted by a qualified health care employee with preservation of indications specified by medical knowledge and they cannot endanger health of the defendant. Specifically, upon preservation of such conditions, the defendant is obliged to submit to blood sampling. In specific cases, the procedures can be performed under duress [22].

Persons sentenced basing on the Executive Penal Code can be subjected to compulsory testing. Art. 116 of the Code contains the order for a defendant to submit to the tests, treatment, medical and sanitary procedures and rehabilitation specified by regulations, regardless of obligations defined by norms related to combating infectious, venereal diseases, tuberculosis, alcoholism and drug abuse.

The obligation to submit to such studies is also specified in the Code of Petty Offences. In the light of law, an offence includes also refusal to provide explanation related to an (infectious) disease, failure to submit to protective vaccination or obligatory examination (Art. 115.1 of the Executive Penal Code: “…those who fail to undergo compulsory examination of his/her health condition…”) [33].



Voluntary diagnostic tests



Blood tests for the purposes of diagnosis of HIV infection can be conducted on request of the patient. Such tests are performed and data on HIV infection are protected by professional secrecy. The patient is entitled also to have blood tested anonymously. According to the law, the voluntary diagnosis of HIV infection takes place when the following conditions are fulfilled:

• blood sampling and the test were performed upon consent of the authorized person,

• the consent was given in an evident manner,

• the patient agreed to the test after being informed about the purpose and character of the test or when a presumptive consent can be assumed.

If the above mentioned conditions are not fulfilled and the patient has requested that a doctor establish cause(s) of his/her complaints, particularly clinical signs/symptoms typical of an infectious disease, protozoan infection, viral infection including HIV, the diagnosis is legal and consent can be surmised as implied consent.

Basing on the same principles, blood can be sampled for needs of HIV infection diagnosis in the case when a patient reported to a doctor for full check-up examinations of his/her health condition of a preventive character. In either situation, the patient did not refuse but also did not agree to blood sampling for purposes of HIV infection diagnosis.

Apart from the cases of voluntary and obligatory studies, HIV infection diagnosis can be performed when such an action is secret to the examined person (without permission) or even when the examined person is wilfully misinformed (erroneous consent). Such situations have no legal basis and, thus, they should be treated as wilful blood sampling by a doctor for the purpose of testing the blood for presence of anti-HIV antibodies without patient’s awareness of this secrecy or following misinforming the patient or fully openly when the patient cannot object to it because the blood has already been drawn.

In cases of tests directed to HIV infection diagnosis involving blood samples taken legally earlier for other purposes and stored in the lab, rules of penal law do not apply since the blood has already been legally drawn earlier upon consent of the patient.

In some cases, performance of secret diagnostic tests for HIV will not result in legal responsibility of the physician if such tests are conducted in order to protect third parties in a state of necessity (Art. 26 of the Penal Code), specifying that endangered values can be saved at the cost of sacrificing another value. Art. 26.1 of the Penal Code can be applied when health and life of other persons present a higher value than rights to self-determination, freedom and immunity of the tested individual. In a state of necessity we are posed with a conflict of values since blood sampling and performance of HIV diagnostic tests against the patient’s will in the well based medical interest, e.g. protection of third parties (medical staff) against infection from the patient violates personal rights of the patient [22].

This takes place in a situation when a direct risk endangers health of a person in whose interest the test was supposed to be performed but the risk could not have been omitted in any other way, e.g. to protect medical staff from becoming infected.

The direct nature of HIV infection risk to third parties is fulfilled when specific situations arise. In such situations, the requirement of undertaking immediate rescue measures is of a principal significance. The physician is confronted with an alternative: to take actions or to tolerate the imminent danger. The direct risk to health and life of third parties, despite ignorance as to seropositivity of the individual who might represent the source of risk, can be concluded when:

1. Implications exist pointing to a potential HIV infection in a patient who is supposed to be subjected to involuntary and not obligatory tests (e.g. manifesting signs/symptoms typical of AIDS-linked opportunistic infections);

2. A real potential exists for getting infected from the examined individual by third parties, e.g. during operation with violation of skin continuity the medical staff is exposed to such a risk.

The state of necessity may also develop when activities have been undertaken to eliminate risks for health and life of the tested individual. In such situations, e.g. the following circumstances argue for performing diagnosis of HIV infection:

• the fact that upon earlier detection of HIV infection, therapeutic measures can be applied which slow down development of the disease and the earlier the infection is diagnosed, the higher are chances for making the carrier’s life longer;

• detection of seropositivity allows to apply other security measures, e.g. isolation;

• in the infected individual, surgery and therapeutic methods not indicated in the carriers may be given up.

According to some authors, referring to the state of necessity upon compulsory drawing patient’s blood is intolerable and violates the law. This view can be approved from the point of view of sensibility and, on the other hand, it would violate the patient’s right to self-determination [25-29].

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