Literature DB >> 25036184

Limited clinical benefit of minority K103N and Y181C-variant detection in addition to routine genotypic resistance testing in antiretroviral therapy-naive patients.

Karin J Metzner1, Alexandra U Scherrer, Viktor von Wyl, Jürg Böni, Sabine Yerly, Thomas Klimkait, Vincent Aubert, Hansjakob Furrer, Hans H Hirsch, Pietro L Vernazza, Matthias Cavassini, Alexandra Calmy, Enos Bernasconi, Rainer Weber, Huldrych F Günthard.   

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: The presence of minority nonnucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitor (NNRTI)-resistant HIV-1 variants prior to antiretroviral therapy (ART) has been linked to virologic failure in treatment-naive patients.
DESIGN: We performed a large retrospective study to determine the number of treatment failures that could have been prevented by implementing minority drug-resistant HIV-1 variant analyses in ART-naïve patients in whom no NNRTI resistance mutations were detected by routine resistance testing.
METHODS: Of 1608 patients in the Swiss HIV Cohort Study, who have initiated first-line ART with two nucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitors (NRTIs) and one NNRTI before July 2008, 519 patients were eligible by means of HIV-1 subtype, viral load and sample availability. Key NNRTI drug resistance mutations K103N and Y181C were measured by allele-specific PCR in 208 of 519 randomly chosen patients.
RESULTS: Minority K103N and Y181C drug resistance mutations were detected in five out of 190 (2.6%) and 10 out of 201 (5%) patients, respectively. Focusing on 183 patients for whom virologic success or failure could be examined, virologic failure occurred in seven out of 183 (3.8%) patients; minority K103N and/or Y181C variants were present prior to ART initiation in only two of those patients. The NNRTI-containing, first-line ART was effective in 10 patients with preexisting minority NNRTI-resistant HIV-1 variant.
CONCLUSION: As revealed in settings of case-control studies, minority NNRTI-resistant HIV-1 variants can have an impact on ART. However, the implementation of minority NNRTI-resistant HIV-1 variant analysis in addition to genotypic resistance testing (GRT) cannot be recommended in routine clinical settings. Additional associated risk factors need to be discovered.

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Year:  2014        PMID: 25036184     DOI: 10.1097/QAD.0000000000000397

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  AIDS        ISSN: 0269-9370            Impact factor:   4.177


  10 in total

1.  Phenotype, Genotype, and Drug Resistance in Subtype C HIV-1 Infection.

Authors:  Anne Derache; Carole L Wallis; Saran Vardhanabhuti; John Bartlett; Nagalingeswaran Kumarasamy; David Katzenstein
Journal:  J Infect Dis       Date:  2015-07-14       Impact factor: 5.226

2.  Linked dual-class HIV resistance mutations are associated with treatment failure.

Authors:  Valerie F Boltz; Wei Shao; Michael J Bale; Elias K Halvas; Brian Luke; James A McIntyre; Robert T Schooley; Shahin Lockman; Judith S Currier; Fred Sawe; Evelyn Hogg; Michael D Hughes; Mary F Kearney; John M Coffin; John W Mellors
Journal:  JCI Insight       Date:  2019-10-03

3.  Low-Abundance Drug-Resistant HIV-1 Variants in Antiretroviral Drug-Naive Individuals: A Systematic Review of Detection Methods, Prevalence, and Clinical Impact.

Authors:  Herbert A Mbunkah; Silvia Bertagnolio; Raph L Hamers; Gillian Hunt; Seth Inzaule; Tobias F Rinke De Wit; Roger Paredes; Neil T Parkin; Michael R Jordan; Karin J Metzner
Journal:  J Infect Dis       Date:  2020-04-27       Impact factor: 5.226

4.  Minority drug-resistant HIV-1 variants in treatment naïve East-African and Caucasian patients detected by allele-specific real-time PCR.

Authors:  Halime Ekici; Wondwossen Amogne; Getachew Aderaye; Lars Lindquist; Anders Sönnerborg; Samir Abdurahman
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2014-10-21       Impact factor: 3.240

5.  A Follow-Up of the Multicenter Collaborative Study on HIV-1 Drug Resistance and Tropism Testing Using 454 Ultra Deep Pyrosequencing.

Authors:  Elizabeth P St John; Birgitte B Simen; Gregory S Turenchalk; Michael S Braverman; Isabella Abbate; Jeroen Aerssens; Olivier Bouchez; Christian Gabriel; Jacques Izopet; Karolin Meixenberger; Francesca Di Giallonardo; Ralph Schlapbach; Roger Paredes; James Sakwa; Gudrun G Schmitz-Agheguian; Alexander Thielen; Martin Victor; Karin J Metzner; Martin P Däumer
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2016-01-12       Impact factor: 3.240

6.  Emergent HIV-1 Drug Resistance Mutations Were Not Present at Low-Frequency at Baseline in Non-Nucleoside Reverse Transcriptase Inhibitor-Treated Subjects in the STaR Study.

Authors:  Danielle P Porter; Martin Daeumer; Alexander Thielen; Silvia Chang; Ross Martin; Cal Cohen; Michael D Miller; Kirsten L White
Journal:  Viruses       Date:  2015-12-07       Impact factor: 5.048

7.  Pre-treatment HIV-drug resistance associated with virologic outcome of first-line NNRTI-antiretroviral therapy: A cohort study in Kenya.

Authors:  Ingrid A Beck; Molly Levine; Christine J McGrath; Steve Bii; Ross S Milne; James M Kingoo; Isaac So; Nina Andersen; Sandra Dross; Robert W Coombs; James Kiarie; Bhavna Chohan; Samah R Sakr; Michael H Chung; Lisa M Frenkel
Journal:  EClinicalMedicine       Date:  2020-01-14

8.  Increased acquired protease inhibitor drug resistance mutations in minor HIV-1 quasispecies from infected patients suspected of failing on national second-line therapy in South Africa.

Authors:  Adetayo Emmanuel Obasa; Anoop T Ambikan; Soham Gupta; Ujjwal Neogi; Graeme Brendon Jacobs
Journal:  BMC Infect Dis       Date:  2021-02-25       Impact factor: 3.090

Review 9.  HIV-1 drug resistance and resistance testing.

Authors:  Dana S Clutter; Michael R Jordan; Silvia Bertagnolio; Robert W Shafer
Journal:  Infect Genet Evol       Date:  2016-08-29       Impact factor: 3.342

10.  Next-generation sequencing analyses of the emergence and maintenance of mutations in CTL epitopes in HIV controllers with differential viremia control.

Authors:  Diogo Gama Caetano; Fernanda Heloise Côrtes; Gonzalo Bello; Sylvia Lopes Maia Teixeira; Brenda Hoagland; Beatriz Grinsztejn; Valdilea Gonçalves Veloso; Monick Lindenmeyer Guimarães; Mariza Gonçalves Morgado
Journal:  Retrovirology       Date:  2018-09-10       Impact factor: 4.602

  10 in total

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