Antimicrob Chemother. 2000 Apr;45 Suppl T3:9-13.
Testing for type-specific antibody to herpes simplex virus--implications for
clinical practice.
Cowan FM.
Department of Sexually Transmitted Diseases, Royal Free and University College
Medical School, London, UK. frances@zappuz.co.zw
Recently, assays that can distinguish between antibody to herpes simplex virus (HSV)
types 1 and 2 have become available. These tests not only make it possible to
better define infection in symptomatic patients and their sexual partners but
also to identify asymptomatic infected individuals who may, nevertheless, be
infectious. Type-specific antibody tests for HSV have several potential
applications. They have a clear role in helping to define the worldwide
distribution and pattern of HSV infection, and a potential role in the
management of individual patients, although this has yet to be formally
established and evaluated. Because of the high costs and potential disadvantages
of targeted screening, particularly in the absence of effective interventions to
prevent acquisition or transmission of infection, the public health benefits of
screening need to be formally evaluated before its widespread introduction.