OBJECTIVES: The current validated assay to determine tropism of HIV variants is Trofile, which has some limitations. The aim of this work was to correlate the virological response to a short-term maraviroc exposure with Trofile. METHODS: From 1 July 2008 to 1 March 2009, 34 consecutive HIV-infected patients with detectable viral load during the last 6 months began an 8 day exposure to maraviroc (MCT group); six HIV-infected patients without antiretroviral therapy received no treatment (control group). Plasma viral load was evaluated on days 0, 2, 5 and 8. Baseline Trofile was performed in MCT group patients. The maraviroc clinical test (MCT) was considered positive if viral load was undetectable (< 40 HIV-RNA copies/mL) or a reduction > or = 1 log(10) HIV-RNA copies/mL was achieved after 8 days of maraviroc exposure. RESULTS: Global concordance between MCT and Trofile was 93.5%. In patients with R5 virus according to Trofile, MCT was positive in 19/20 (concordance 95%); in patients with dual/mixed virus, MCT was negative in 10/11 (concordance 90.9%). An additional phenotypic tropism assay was performed in patients with discordance between MCT and Trofile, being concordant with MCT in both cases. Three patients showed a non-reportable Trofile result, and all of them achieved undetectability after MCT. CONCLUSIONS: A clinical approach like short-term maraviroc exposure could be an additional resource to genetic and phenotypic HIV tropism assays. This clinical approach shows high concordance with Trofile, and could allow patients with non-reportable results by Trofile to benefit from maraviroc therapy.
OBJECTIVES: The current validated assay to determine tropism of HIV variants is Trofile, which has some limitations. The aim of this work was to correlate the virological response to a short-term maraviroc exposure with Trofile. METHODS: From 1 July 2008 to 1 March 2009, 34 consecutive HIV-infectedpatients with detectable viral load during the last 6 months began an 8 day exposure to maraviroc (MCT group); six HIV-infectedpatients without antiretroviral therapy received no treatment (control group). Plasma viral load was evaluated on days 0, 2, 5 and 8. Baseline Trofile was performed in MCT group patients. The maraviroc clinical test (MCT) was considered positive if viral load was undetectable (< 40 HIV-RNA copies/mL) or a reduction > or = 1 log(10) HIV-RNA copies/mL was achieved after 8 days of maraviroc exposure. RESULTS: Global concordance between MCT and Trofile was 93.5%. In patients with R5 virus according to Trofile, MCT was positive in 19/20 (concordance 95%); in patients with dual/mixed virus, MCT was negative in 10/11 (concordance 90.9%). An additional phenotypic tropism assay was performed in patients with discordance between MCT and Trofile, being concordant with MCT in both cases. Three patients showed a non-reportable Trofile result, and all of them achieved undetectability after MCT. CONCLUSIONS: A clinical approach like short-term maraviroc exposure could be an additional resource to genetic and phenotypic HIV tropism assays. This clinical approach shows high concordance with Trofile, and could allow patients with non-reportable results by Trofile to benefit from maraviroc therapy.
Authors: A Gonzalez-Serna; R A McGovern; P R Harrigan; F Vidal; A F Y Poon; S Ferrando-Martinez; M A Abad; M Genebat; M Leal; E Ruiz-Mateos Journal: Antimicrob Agents Chemother Date: 2011-12-05 Impact factor: 5.191
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