Introduction: Who Should Undergo Diagnostics and When
Testing for HIV is important even when you feel perfectly healthy. Asymptomatic HIV infection is the second stage of HIV, when the virus is present and active in your body, but you have no symptoms at all. This silent period can be confusing because many people assume that if they feel fine, they couldn’t possibly have HIV. The reality is quite different: the virus quietly multiplies in the body while the immune system slowly weakens over time, all without causing any noticeable signs.[1]
Everyone between the ages of 13 and 64 should get tested for HIV at least once in their lifetime, regardless of whether they have symptoms. People with certain risk factors should get tested more often. These risk factors include having unprotected sex with multiple partners, sharing needles or drug injection equipment, having another sexually transmitted infection, or having a partner who has HIV or whose HIV status is unknown.[2][12]
The only way to know if you have HIV is through testing. Many people find out they have the virus only after getting a routine test during a regular checkup or when trying to donate blood. Some discover their status when being tested for other health conditions. Because the asymptomatic stage can last for years—sometimes even a decade or longer without any symptoms—waiting for symptoms to appear before getting tested means missing a critical window for early treatment.[1][3]
Getting tested early matters immensely. When HIV is detected during the asymptomatic stage, treatment can begin before the immune system suffers significant damage. Research shows that people who start HIV treatment early can live as long as people who do not have the virus. Early detection also helps protect sexual partners and prevents unknowing transmission to others.[3][8]
All pregnant women should be tested for HIV as part of their prenatal care. This testing is essential because HIV can be passed from mother to baby during pregnancy, labor, delivery, or breastfeeding. When HIV is detected early in pregnancy, treatment can reduce the risk of transmission to the baby to 1% or less.[9][12]
Diagnostic Methods
Several types of tests are available to diagnose HIV, and they work by detecting different parts of the virus or the body’s response to it. Understanding these tests helps remove some of the mystery and anxiety around HIV testing.
Antigen-Antibody Tests
The most commonly used test for HIV screening is called a fourth-generation antigen-antibody test. This test looks for two things at once: HIV antigens and HIV antibodies. Antigens are substances that are part of the HIV virus itself, specifically a protein called p24 that appears in the blood within a few weeks after infection. Antibodies are proteins that your immune system creates to fight off HIV after you’ve been exposed to the virus.[10][12]
This test usually uses blood drawn from a vein in your arm. One of the advantages of this test is that it can detect HIV earlier than older tests because it looks for the p24 antigen, which shows up in the blood about two weeks after infection. The antibodies typically take longer to develop—usually between one to two months after infection, a process called seroconversion. You may not show a positive result on an antigen-antibody test until 2 to 6 weeks after exposure to HIV.[6][10]
Antibody Tests
Antibody tests look only for antibodies to HIV in your blood or saliva. Most rapid HIV tests, including self-tests you can do at home, are antibody tests. These tests are convenient and provide results quickly—sometimes in as little as 20 minutes. However, because they only detect antibodies and not antigens, they may take longer to show a positive result after infection. You may not show a positive result on an antibody test until 3 to 12 weeks after you’ve been exposed to HIV.[10]
The period between when someone gets infected with HIV and when a test can reliably detect it is called the window period. During this time, even though the virus is present in the body and can be transmitted to others, tests may come back negative. This is why repeat testing may be recommended if you’ve had a recent exposure to HIV.[12]
Nucleic Acid Tests
Nucleic acid tests (NATs), also called viral load tests, look for the actual virus in your blood rather than antibodies or antigens. These tests use blood drawn from a vein and can detect HIV earlier than other tests—as early as two weeks after infection. NAT is the first test to become positive after exposure to HIV.[10]
Because NATs are expensive and complex to perform, they’re not typically used for routine screening. However, your healthcare provider may suggest a NAT if you might have been exposed to HIV within the past few weeks, especially if other tests are negative but you have symptoms of acute HIV infection or a known high-risk exposure.[10]
Confirmatory Testing
If your initial HIV test comes back positive, additional testing is performed to confirm the result. This typically involves a different type of test that can distinguish between HIV-1 and HIV-2 (two different types of the virus) and confirm the presence of HIV infection. No one receives a positive HIV diagnosis based on a single test result—confirmation testing ensures accuracy.[12]
Tests to Evaluate Disease Stage
Once HIV infection is confirmed, several other tests help doctors understand how far the infection has progressed and what treatment approach to take. These tests are essential for people in the asymptomatic stage because they reveal what’s happening inside the body even when there are no outward symptoms.
The CD4 T cell count measures the number of CD4 cells in your blood. CD4 T cells, also called CD4+ T cells or T4 cells, are white blood cells that help coordinate your immune system’s response to infections. HIV specifically targets and destroys these cells. A normal CD4 count ranges from about 500 to 1,500 cells per cubic millimeter. During the asymptomatic stage, the CD4 count gradually declines as the virus continues to damage the immune system. Monitoring CD4 counts helps doctors assess the health of your immune system and determine when certain preventive treatments for infections might be needed.[10]
The viral load test measures the amount of HIV in your blood—specifically, how many copies of the virus are present per milliliter of blood. A higher viral load means more virus is actively replicating in the body. During the asymptomatic stage, even though you feel fine, the virus keeps multiplying, and the viral load reveals this activity. Viral load testing is crucial for monitoring how well HIV treatment is working. The goal of treatment is to reduce the viral load to undetectable levels, which means the amount of virus is so low that standard tests cannot detect it.[10]
Drug Resistance Testing
Before starting treatment, doctors often perform HIV drug resistance testing. This test checks whether the strain of HIV you have is resistant to any of the medications used to treat HIV. Some people are infected with HIV that already has genetic mutations making it resistant to certain drugs. Knowing this information upfront helps doctors choose the most effective treatment regimen for you from the start.[12]
Other Health Assessments
When you’re diagnosed with HIV during the asymptomatic stage, your healthcare provider will also perform a comprehensive evaluation to check your overall health and identify any other conditions that might affect your treatment. This typically includes testing for other sexually transmitted infections, hepatitis B and C, tuberculosis, and kidney and liver function. These tests provide a complete picture of your health and help guide treatment decisions.[12]
Diagnostics for Clinical Trial Qualification
People with asymptomatic HIV infection may be eligible to participate in clinical trials—research studies testing new treatments, prevention strategies, or ways to improve HIV care. Clinical trials are essential for advancing HIV treatment and potentially finding a cure. However, specific diagnostic criteria are used to determine who can participate in these studies.
For clinical trials involving asymptomatic HIV infection, researchers typically require confirmation of HIV infection through standard diagnostic tests. Participants must have documentation of their HIV-positive status, usually through antigen-antibody testing or NAT. The trials often specify a particular range for CD4 cell counts—for example, some studies specifically enroll people with CD4 counts above 500 cells per cubic millimeter, while others may focus on different ranges.[8]
Viral load measurements are another standard criterion for clinical trial participation. Some trials enroll people who have not yet started antiretroviral therapy (ART)—the medication used to treat HIV—while others focus on people already receiving treatment. Studies may specify minimum or maximum viral load levels as part of their inclusion criteria. For instance, a landmark study called START (Strategic Timing of Antiretroviral Treatment) specifically enrolled people with HIV who had CD4 counts above 500 cells per cubic millimeter and had not yet begun treatment. This study helped establish that starting treatment immediately, even during the asymptomatic stage, provides better health outcomes than waiting until the CD4 count drops.[8]
Clinical trials also commonly require drug resistance testing before enrollment. This ensures that researchers understand which HIV medications the virus is sensitive to and helps determine if the trial’s treatment approach is appropriate for each participant. Some trials specifically study people with drug-resistant HIV, while others exclude participants with certain resistance patterns.[8]
Additional health assessments are standard for clinical trial enrollment. These typically include comprehensive blood tests to check kidney and liver function, blood cell counts, and screening for other infections like hepatitis B and C or tuberculosis. Researchers need this baseline information to monitor participants’ health throughout the study and to identify any changes that might be related to the treatment being tested.[8]
Some clinical trials for asymptomatic HIV infection have strict criteria about when participants last began treatment or whether they’ve ever received treatment before. Trials may specifically seek people who have never taken HIV medications, or they may focus on people who started treatment within a certain timeframe. These criteria help researchers answer specific questions about treatment timing and effectiveness.[13]
Genetic testing may also be part of some clinical trials. Researchers know that how quickly HIV progresses from one stage to another varies greatly between individuals, and genetics plays a role in this variation. Some people naturally control HIV replication better than others—these individuals are sometimes called HIV controllers. Studies involving genetic testing help scientists understand these differences and may lead to new treatment approaches.[13]
Regular monitoring is a key component of clinical trial participation. Once enrolled, participants typically undergo frequent diagnostic testing to track how the virus and their immune system respond to the intervention being studied. This usually includes regular CD4 counts and viral load measurements, often more frequently than would occur in routine clinical care. These repeated measurements help researchers determine whether the treatment being studied is working and whether it’s safe.[8]



