| Literature DB >> 17620130 |
Amisha Malhotra1, Sunanda Gaur, Patricia Whitley-Williams, Caitlin Loomis, Anna Petrova.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Although the introduction of combined therapy with reverse transcriptase and protease inhibitors has resulted in considerable decrease in HIV related mortality; it has also induced the development of multiple drug-resistant HIV-1 variants. The few studies on HIV-1 mutagenesis in HIV infected children have not evaluated the impact of HIV-1 mutations on the clinical, virological and immunological presentation of HIV disease that is fundamental to optimizing the treatment regimens for these patients.Entities:
Year: 2007 PMID: 17620130 PMCID: PMC1959238 DOI: 10.1186/1742-6405-4-15
Source DB: PubMed Journal: AIDS Res Ther ISSN: 1742-6405 Impact factor: 2.250
Demographic, clinical, and immunological data in association with the ARV treatment regimens
| Age of study entry (Mean+/-SD, yrs) | 11.9+/-4.3 | 10.8+/-3.4 | 8.8+/-5.1 | 10.4+/-3.0 |
| Length of treatment (Mean+/-SD, yrs) | 7.8+/-3.1 | 6.7+/-2.3 | 5.1+/-2.8 | 5.8+/-2.7 |
| Number of Medications | ||||
| NRTI | 3.7+/-0.7 | 3.3+/-1.0 | 3.1+/-1.0 | 2.7+/-1.1 |
| NNRTI | 1.1 +/-0.2 | 1.2+/-0.4 | - | - |
| PI | 1.1+/-0.6 | - | 1.2+/-0.4 | - |
| Clinical categories * | ||||
| B | 8 (53.3%) | 3/5 (60.0%) | 4 (30.8%) | 3 (42.9%) |
| C | 7 (46.7%) | 2/5 (40.0%) | 9(69.2%) | 4 (57.1%) |
| Immune categories ** | ||||
| 1 (no suppression) | 10 (66.3%) | 4 (66.7%) | 7 (53.9%) | 3 (42.9%) |
| 2–3 (moderate/severe) | 7 (33.3%) | 2 (33.3%) | 6 (46.1%) | 4 (57.1%) |
| PVL (n, %) | ||||
| <10,000 | 5 (33.3%) | 4 (66.7%) | 2 (15.4%) | 4 (57.1%) |
| ≥ 10,000 | 10 (66.7%) | 2 (33.3%) | 11 (84.6%) | 3 (42.9%) |
| Number of mutations (Mean+/-SD) | 5.7+/-3.8 | 3.5+/-1.6 | 4.7+/-3.2 | 3.7+/-2.3 |
*B-moderately, C-severely symptomatic 22,23
** Immune categories based on age-specific CD4+ T-lymphocyte count.22,23
Figure 1HIV-1 drug resistance mutations correlated with age and duration of ARV therapy (in years).
Figure 2Presence of drug-specific HIV-1 mutations in relation to ARV regimens.
Demographic, clinical, and immunological data in association with the resistance mutations in the PR gene of the HIV-1 isolates
| Age of study entry (Mean+/-SD, years) | 10.2+/-5.2 | 10.6+/-2.7 |
| Length of treatment (Mean+/-SD, years) | 6.9+/-3.4 | 6.2+/-2.7 |
| NNRTI therapy | 9 (69.2%) | 12 (42.9%) |
| TAMs mutations | 10 (76.9%) | 18 (64.3%) |
| 3TC mutations | 9 (64.2%) * | 9 (32.1%) |
| NNRTI mutations | 6 (46.1%) | 12 (42.9%) |
| PI (secondary) | 10 (76.9%) *** | 15 (53.5%) |
| Clinical categories # | ||
| B | 6 (46.1) | 12/27 (44.4%) |
| C | 7 (53.9%) | 15/27 (55.6%) |
| Immune categories ## | ||
| 1 (no suppression) | 8 (61.5%) | 16 (57.1%) |
| 2–3 (moderate/severe) | 5 (28.5%) | 12 (42.9%) |
| PVL (n, %) | ||
| <10,000 | 1 (7.7%) ** | 14 (50.0%) |
| ≥ 10,000 | 12 (92.3%) | 14 (50.0%) |
Chi-square: * P < 0.02 ** P < 0.008 ***P < 0.0001
# Immune categories based on age-specific CD4+ T-lymphocyte count.22,23
## B-moderately, C-severely symptomatic 22,23
Figure 3Association of drug-specific HIV-1 mutations and plasma viral load (PVL).