False-positive HIV in a patient with SARS-CoV-2 infection; a case report.

Rawezh Q Salih, Gasha A Salih, Berwn A Abdulla, Abdulla D Ahmed, Hawbash R Mohammed, Fahmi H Kakamad, Abdulwahid M Salih
Author Information
  1. Rawezh Q Salih: Smart Health Tower, Madam Mitterrand Street, Sulaimani, Kurdistan, Iraq.
  2. Gasha A Salih: Gaziosmanpasa University, Faculty of Medicine, Tokat, Turkey.
  3. Berwn A Abdulla: Smart Health Tower, Madam Mitterrand Street, Sulaimani, Kurdistan, Iraq.
  4. Abdulla D Ahmed: Smart Health Tower, Madam Mitterrand Street, Sulaimani, Kurdistan, Iraq.
  5. Hawbash R Mohammed: Smart Health Tower, Madam Mitterrand Street, Sulaimani, Kurdistan, Iraq.
  6. Fahmi H Kakamad: Smart Health Tower, Madam Mitterrand Street, Sulaimani, Kurdistan, Iraq.
  7. Abdulwahid M Salih: Smart Health Tower, Madam Mitterrand Street, Sulaimani, Kurdistan, Iraq.

Abstract

INTRODUCTION: A small portion of Corona Virus disease-2019 (COVID-19) cases associated with co-infections, however occasionally they turn out to be false positive due to possible cross-reactivities. The current report aims to present a rare case of false-positive human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) in a COVID-19 patient.
CASE REPORT: A 32-year-old female complaining from thyroid problems referred for thyroid operation. She had mild symptoms of COVID-19. Her preoperative laboratory findings were normal, except for HIV screening test which was repetitively positive. RNA PCR was performed to confirm the diagnosis of HIV, it revealed a negative result. The patient underwent thyroidectomy as planned and was given the required supportive treatment to recover from COVID-19. Two-month follow up revealed that she was negative for COVID-19 on PCR testing, and HIV immunoassay test was no longer positive.
DISCUSSION: Due to structural similarities between the spike protein chains of SARS-CoV-2 and some other viruses such as dengue, Zika, and other closely related coronaviruses (SARS-CoV, MERS-CoV), the protein can potentially interfere with the immunoassay tests. Although HIV immunoassay tests have high sensitivity and specificity, false-positive results have been reported, such as in the case of Epstein Barr virus, Influenza vaccination, and the Australian COVID-19 vaccination.
CONCLUSION: Similarity between HIV and SARS-CoV-2 spike proteins can lead to antibody cross-reactivities, yielding false-positive results on immunoassay screening tests.

Keywords

References

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Word Cloud

Created with Highcharts 10.0.0HIVCOVID-19immunoassaySARS-CoV-2positivecasefalse-positivepatienttestscross-reactivitiesreportvirusthyroidscreeningtestPCRrevealednegativespikeproteincanresultsvaccinationFalse-positiveINTRODUCTION:smallportionCoronaVirusdisease-2019casesassociatedco-infectionshoweveroccasionallyturnfalseduepossiblecurrentaimspresentrarehumanimmunodeficiencyCASEREPORT:32-year-oldfemalecomplainingproblemsreferredoperationmildsymptomspreoperativelaboratoryfindingsnormalexceptrepetitivelyRNAperformedconfirmdiagnosisresultunderwentthyroidectomyplannedgivenrequiredsupportivetreatmentrecoverTwo-monthfollowtestinglongerDISCUSSION:DuestructuralsimilaritieschainsvirusesdengueZikacloselyrelatedcoronavirusesSARS-CoVMERS-CoVpotentiallyinterfereAlthoughhighsensitivityspecificityreportedEpsteinBarrInfluenzaAustralianCONCLUSION:SimilarityproteinsleadantibodyyieldinginfectionCross-reactivity

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