| Literature DB >> 21034246 |
Hermann Bussmann1, Florindo de la Hoz Gomez, Thierry H Roels, C William Wester, Stephane M Bodika, Sikhulile Moyo, Negussie Taffa, Marina G Anderson, Madisa Mine, Ebi-Celestin Bile, Chunfu Yang, Kereng Mphoyakgosi, Erica Ann Lehotzky, Busisiwe Mlotshwa, Mpho Mmelesi, Khumo Seipone, Moeketsi J Makhema, Richard G Marlink, Vladimir Novitsky, M Essex.
Abstract
The emergence and spread of transmitted drug resistance (TDR) poses a major threat to the success of the rapidly expanding antiretroviral treatment (ART) programs in resource-limited countries. The World Health Organization recommends the use of the HIV Drug Resistance Threshold Survey (HIVDR-TS) as an affordable means to monitor the presence of TDR in these settings. We report our experiences and results of the 2007 HIVDR-TS in Botswana, a country with one of the longest-existing national public ART programs in Africa. The HIVDR-TS and HIV-1 incidence testing were performed in the two largest national sites as part of the 2007 antenatal Botswana Sentinel Survey. The HIVDR-TS showed no significant drug resistance mutations (TDR less than 5%) in one site. TDR prevalence, however, could not be ascertained at the second site due to low sample size. The agreement between HIVDR-TS eligibility criteria and laboratory-based methodologies (i.e., BED-CEIA and LS-EIA) in identifying recently HIV-1 infected adults was poor. Five years following the establishment of Botswana's public ART program, the prevalence of TDR remains low. The HIVDR-TS methodology has limitations for low-density populations as in Botswana, where the majority of antenatal sites are too small to recruit sufficient numbers of patients. In addition, the eligibility criteria (age <25 years and parity (first pregnancy)) of the HIVDR-TS performed poorly in identifying recent HIV-1 infections in Botswana. An alternative sampling strategy should be considered for the surveillance of HIVDR in Botswana and similar geographic settings.Entities:
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Year: 2010 PMID: 21034246 DOI: 10.1089/aid.2009.0299
Source DB: PubMed Journal: AIDS Res Hum Retroviruses ISSN: 0889-2229 Impact factor: 2.205