Literature DB >> 18218003

Detection of drug-resistant HIV minorities in clinical specimens and therapy failure.

S Louvel1, M Battegay, P Vernazza, T Bregenzer, T Klimkait, F Hamy.   

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: Particularly for therapy-experienced patients, resistance assessment by genotypic or phenotypic methods produces discordances. This study seeks proof that differences may arise from the fact that genotyping produces a single summary sequence whereas replicative phenotyping (rPhenotyping) functionally detects and assigns resistances in mixed HIV populations.
METHODS: For validation, defined mixes of wild-type and M184V mutant were analysed by rPhenotyping or standard genotyping. Allele-specific and quantitative polymerase chain reaction (PCR) set detection and quantification limits for minor virus populations in vitro and in authentic clinical samples showing geno-/pheno-discrepant lamivudine resistance.
RESULTS: Allele-specific and real-time PCR methods detected down to 0.3% of mutant M184V. The functional assessment was sensitive enough to reveal <1% of mutant M184V in mixed samples. Also in discordant samples from the diagnostic routine, in which rPhenotyping had identified drug resistance, real-time PCR confirmed minute amounts of mutant M184V.
CONCLUSION: By utilizing the replication dynamics of HIV under drug pressure, a rPhenotyping format potently reveals relevant therapy-resistant minority species, even of HIV known to possess reduced replicative fitness. With its rapid turnaround of 8 days and its high sensitivity, our rPhenotyping system may be a valuable diagnostic tool for detecting the early emergence of therapy-threatening HIV minorities or the persistence of residual resistant virus.

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Year:  2008        PMID: 18218003     DOI: 10.1111/j.1468-1293.2007.00529.x

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  HIV Med        ISSN: 1464-2662            Impact factor:   3.180


  3 in total

Review 1.  Minority variants of drug-resistant HIV.

Authors:  Sara Gianella; Douglas D Richman
Journal:  J Infect Dis       Date:  2010-09-01       Impact factor: 5.226

2.  Replicative phenotyping adds value to genotypic resistance testing in heavily pre-treated HIV-infected individuals--the Swiss HIV Cohort Study.

Authors:  Jan Fehr; Tracy R Glass; Séverine Louvel; François Hamy; Hans H Hirsch; Viktor von Wyl; Jürg Böni; Sabine Yerly; Philippe Bürgisser; Matthias Cavassini; Christoph A Fux; Bernard Hirschel; Pietro Vernazza; Gladys Martinetti; Enos Bernasconi; Huldrych F Günthard; Manuel Battegay; Heiner C Bucher; Thomas Klimkait
Journal:  J Transl Med       Date:  2011-01-21       Impact factor: 5.531

3.  Dynamics of hepatitis B virus quasispecies in association with nucleos(t)ide analogue treatment determined by ultra-deep sequencing.

Authors:  Norihiro Nishijima; Hiroyuki Marusawa; Yoshihide Ueda; Ken Takahashi; Akihiro Nasu; Yukio Osaki; Tadayuki Kou; Shujiro Yazumi; Takeshi Fujiwara; Soken Tsuchiya; Kazuharu Shimizu; Shinji Uemoto; Tsutomu Chiba
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2012-04-16       Impact factor: 3.240

  3 in total

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