| Literature DB >> 19825134 |
Abstract
The development of drug resistance and cross-resistance continues to pose a challenge to successful long-term antiretroviral therapy despite the availability of new antiretroviral agents. The genetic barrier to resistance of a regimen does not directly correlate with its effectiveness. For some regimens with a low genetic barrier to resistance, however, the emergence of only 1 or 2 key resistance mutations may confer drug resistance not only to that regimen but also to other agents, thereby limiting subsequent treatment options. In addition to the genetic barrier to resistance, factors such as efficacy, safety, tolerability, convenience, and adherence must be considered when choosing a regimen.Entities:
Year: 2005 PMID: 19825134 PMCID: PMC2804709 DOI: 10.1186/1758-2652-7-3-69
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Int AIDS Soc ISSN: 1758-2652 Impact factor: 5.396
PI and NRTI Resistance Mutations Observed Between Weeks 24 and 108 in Patients Experiencing Virologic Failure in the M98-863 Study[2]
| Regimen | PI resistance | 3TC resistance | d4T resistance |
|---|---|---|---|
| LPV/r + d4T + 3TC(N = 326) | 0/51 (0%) | 19/51 (37%) | 0/50 (0%)* |
| NFV + d4T + 3TC(N = 327) | 43/96 (45%) | 79/96 (82%) | 9/96 (9%) |
* There was evidence of archival resistance at codon 215 in one patient who was disqualified from the analysis.
Incidence of the Emergence of Mutations During Therapy at the First Failure Timepoint in the SOLO Study[37]
| FPV/r Once Daily | NFV Twice Daily | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| No resistance mutations | 84% | 31% | < .001 |
| Primary or secondary PI mutations | 0% | 50% | < .001 |
| M184I/V | 13% | 69% | < .001 |
| K65R, L74V | 0% | 6% | .784 |
Adapted with permission from MacManus et al. GW433908/ritonavir once daily in antiretroviral therapy-naive HIV-infected patients: absence of protease resistance at 48 weeks. AIDS. 2004;18:651–655.