Literature DB >> 15279592

The challenge of antiretroviral-drug-resistant HIV: is there any possible clinical advantage?

Mauro Zaccarelli1, Valerio Tozzi, Carlo Federico Perno, Andrea Antinori.   

Abstract

Resistance to antiretroviral drugs is associated with reduced treatment options and, therefore, increased risk of disease progression or death. Despite the main goal of antiretroviral therapy should be achievement of complete suppression of HIV replication, the accumulation of resistance mutations in patients with multiple treatment failure makes this objective often difficult, or even impossible to obtain. Thus, clinicians should be aware about the complex relationship between drug pressure and viral replication capacity and about some potential advantages related to antiretroviral drug resistance. The two main biological mechanisms that can be at the origin of these clinical benefits are: reduction of viral fitness and viral hypersusceptibility. The term "fitness" indicates the ability of HIV to maintain high rate of replication capacity in presence of antiretroviral drugs. Consequently, replication capacity, high in presence of wild type virus, tends to decrease when HIV must adapt its enzymes to work in presence of drugs. A reduction of viral fitness is observed in patients harbouring mutations conferring resistance to all the three classes of antiretroviral drugs currently in use. Particularly, the effects on reduction of replication capacity related to M184V mutation in reverse transcriptase are analyzed. Viral isolates with reduced susceptibility or resistance to some antiretroviral drugs may exhibit significant increased susceptibility to other drugs acting on the same enzyme. This phenomenon is known as hypersusceptibility and can be demonstrated in vitro by phenotypic assays. Phenotypic hypersusceptibility has been demonstrated for all three drug classes. Particularly, NNRTI hypersusceptibility, associated with NRTI mutations, is analyzed and discussed. Copyright 2004 Bentham Science Publishers Ltd.

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Year:  2004        PMID: 15279592     DOI: 10.2174/1570162043351192

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Curr HIV Res        ISSN: 1570-162X            Impact factor:   1.581


  6 in total

1.  Prevalence of Transmitted Drug Resistance Mutations in HIV-1-Infected Drug-Naive Patients from Urban and Suburban Regions of Kenya.

Authors:  Simon Onsongo; Syed Hani Abidi; Samoel Khamadi; Reena Shah; Sheila Kageha; Peter Ojwang; Syed Ali; Nancy Okinda
Journal:  AIDS Res Hum Retroviruses       Date:  2015-09-24       Impact factor: 2.205

2.  Transmission cluster of multiclass highly drug-resistant HIV-1 among 9 men who have sex with men in Seattle/King County, WA, 2005-2007.

Authors:  Susan E Buskin; Giovanina M Ellis; Gregory G Pepper; Lisa M Frenkel; Steven A Pergam; Geoffrey S Gottlieb; Carrie Horwitch; Jeffrey F Olliffe; Karen Johnson; Peter Shalit; Corinne Heinen; Margot Schwartz; Robert W Wood
Journal:  J Acquir Immune Defic Syndr       Date:  2008-10-01       Impact factor: 3.731

Review 3.  Bacterial pore-forming proteins as anthelmintics.

Authors:  Yan Hu; Raffi V Aroian
Journal:  Invert Neurosci       Date:  2012-05-05

4.  The L76V mutation in HIV-1 protease is potentially associated with hypersusceptibility to protease inhibitors Atazanavir and Saquinavir: is there a clinical advantage?

Authors:  Frank Wiesmann; Jan Vachta; Robert Ehret; Hauke Walter; Rolf Kaiser; Martin Stürmer; André Tappe; Martin Däumer; Thomas Berg; Gudrun Naeth; Patrick Braun; Heribert Knechten
Journal:  AIDS Res Ther       Date:  2011-02-13       Impact factor: 2.250

5.  Prevalence of and viral outcomes associated with primary HIV-1 drug resistance.

Authors:  S E Buskin; S Zhang; C S Thibault
Journal:  Open AIDS J       Date:  2012-09-07

6.  Adaptation of HIV-1 depends on the host-cell environment.

Authors:  Tim van Opijnen; Anthony de Ronde; Maarten C Boerlijst; Ben Berkhout
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2007-03-07       Impact factor: 3.240

  6 in total

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