Analytical and Clinical Validation of the ConfiSign HIV Self-Test for Blood-Based HIV Screening
Hyeyoung Lee, Ae-Ran Choi, Hye-Sun Park, JoungOk Kim, Seo-A Park, Seungok Lee, Jaeeun Yoo, Ji Sang Yoon, Sang Il Kim, Yoon Hee Jun, Younjeong Kim, Yeon Jeong Jeong, Eun-Jee Oh

TL;DR
This study validates a new HIV self-test that accurately detects HIV-1 and HIV-2 antibodies in blood samples, showing strong agreement with standard lab tests.
Contribution
The study provides comprehensive analytical and clinical validation of a new blood-based HIV self-test, ConfiSign, for global use.
Findings
The test achieved 100% positive and 99.2% negative agreement with reference assays in retrospective testing.
Prospective testing showed 100% sensitivity and specificity with a low invalid result rate.
The test reliably detected early HIV infection and various HIV subtypes without cross-reactivity.
Abstract
Background/Objectives: Since the World Health Organization (WHO) recommended HIV self-testing as an alternative to traditional facility-based testing in 2016, it has been increasingly adopted worldwide. This study aimed to evaluate the performance of the ConfiSign HIV Self-Test (GenBody Inc., Republic of Korea), a newly developed blood-based immunochromatographic assay for the qualitative detection of total antibodies (IgG and IgM) against HIV-1/HIV-2. Methods: The evaluation included four components: (1) retrospective analysis of 1400 archived serum samples (400 HIV-positive and 1000 HIV-negative samples), (2) prospective self-testing by 335 participants (112 HIV-positive participants and 223 individuals with an unknown HIV status, including healthy volunteers), (3) assessment using seroconversion panels and diverse HIV subtypes, and (4) analytical specificity testing for…
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Taxonomy
TopicsHIV/AIDS Research and Interventions · HIV Research and Treatment · Syphilis Diagnosis and Treatment
