Dr Hunter Handsfield ile yazışmam sonucu aşağıdaki gibidir. Buradaki arkadaslara yardımcı olması için paylaşıyorum.
Unless you had a very high risk exposure, you have been very excessively tested. If you'd like to describe it, I'd be happy to advise. But pretty much no matter how high the risk at the time, and regardless of what symptoms you might have that worry you, for sure you did not catch HIV. Your test results are absolutely conclusive. To your specific questions:
1. The numerical result is entirely unrelated to partial detection of antigen. The very same specimen tested 10 times generally gives different numbers. In fact, it's somewhat unusual for the results to be as closely grouped as your first four p24 test numbers. Anything up to the cut-off (usually around 1.0) is completely negative, with no difference between, say, 0.1, 0.3, 0.7, or 0.9. All are totally negative.
2. As implied above, the "right" interval depends in part on the nature of the risk. But the antigen-antibody ("4th generation", "duo") tests always are 100% conclusive by 6 weeks. Also, the combination of negagtive RNA at around 2 weeks plus negative antibody at 4+ weeks also is conclusive, so you could have stopped testing after the 29 days blood test.
3. For sure you can drop the subject and move on without worry you have HIV.
I hope this information is helpful. Let me know if anything isn't clear.