| Literature DB >> 17411338 |
Frank Maldarelli1, Sarah Palmer, Martin S King, Ann Wiegand, Michael A Polis, JoAnn Mican, Joseph A Kovacs, Richard T Davey, Diane Rock-Kress, Robin Dewar, Shuying Liu, Julia A Metcalf, Catherine Rehm, Scott C Brun, George J Hanna, Dale J Kempf, John M Coffin, John W Mellors.
Abstract
Current antiretroviral therapy is effective in suppressing but not eliminating HIV-1 infection. Understanding the source of viral persistence is essential for developing strategies to eradicate HIV-1 infection. We therefore investigated the level of plasma HIV-1 RNA in patients with viremia suppressed to less than 50-75 copies/ml on standard protease inhibitor- or non-nucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitor-containing antiretroviral therapy using a new, real-time PCR-based assay for HIV-1 RNA with a limit of detection of one copy of HIV-1 RNA. Single copy assay results revealed that >80% of patients on initial antiretroviral therapy for 60 wk had persistent viremia of one copy/ml or more with an overall median of 3.1 copies/ml. The level of viremia correlated with pretherapy plasma HIV-1 RNA but not with the specific treatment regimen. Longitudinal studies revealed no significant decline in the level of viremia between 60 and 110 wk of suppressive antiretroviral therapy. These data suggest that the persistent viremia on current antiretroviral therapy is derived, at least in part, from long-lived cells that are infected prior to initiation of therapy.Entities:
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Year: 2007 PMID: 17411338 PMCID: PMC1847689 DOI: 10.1371/journal.ppat.0030046
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS Pathog ISSN: 1553-7366 Impact factor: 6.823
Figure 1Decline and Stable Persistence of Plasma HIV-1 RNA in Patients Suppressed on Antiretroviral Therapy
Plasma from patients initiating antiretroviral therapy with stavudine + lamivudine + efavirenz (patients A and B) or stavudine + lamivudine + indinavir + nevirapine (patient C) was assayed by bDNA (diamonds) and SCA (squares). Levels of virus above the limit of detection for each assay are shown by filled symbols; levels below this limit are shown by hollow symbols plotted at the assay limit.
Figure 2Distribution of Plasma HIV-1 RNA Levels in Patients with Persistently Suppressed Viremia (HIV-1 RNA <50 Copies/ml from Week 24 to 60) on Standard Antiretroviral Therapy
Week 60 viral RNA levels for M98–863 patients on LPV/r- (blue) or NFV-containing (red) regimens were determined by SCA. The percentile of patients in each group with a given RNA level is presented. SCA determinations for patients on NNRTI- containing regimens (n = 28) for >1 y are included (green). The inset shows the mean and median log10 RNA levels for each group.
Figure 3Correlation between Pretherapy and On-Therapy Viral RNA Levels
Pretherapy and week 60 SCA values were determined for 130 patients from both the NFV and LPV/r arms in M98–863. Correlation coefficients for patients taking LPV/r and NFV regimens were similar.
Figure 4HIV-1 RNA Levels Over 50 wk of Suppressive Antiretroviral Therapy
Plasma samples from patients in both arms of the M98–863 trial with viremia suppressed to <50 copies/ml during weeks 60–110 were subjected to SCA analysis. HIV-1 RNA levels for each patient are presented here as a function of weeks on therapy.