| Literature DB >> 27818211 |
Maria Casadellà1, Roger Paredes2.
Abstract
The emerging HIV-1 resistance epidemic is threatening the impressive global advances in HIV-1 infection treatment and prevention achieved in the last decade. Next-generation sequencing is improving our ability to understand, diagnose and prevent HIV-1 resistance, being increasingly cost-effective and more accessible. However, NGS still faces a number of limitations that need to be addressed to enable its widespread use. Here, we will review the main NGS platforms available for HIV-1 diagnosis, the factors affecting the clinical utility of NGS testing and the evidence supporting -or not- ultrasensitive genotyping over Sanger sequencing for routine HIV-1 diagnosis. Now that global HIV-1 eradication might be within our reach, making NGS accessible also to LMICs has become a priority. Reductions in sequencing costs, particularly in library preparation, and accessibility to low-cost, robust but simplified automated bioinformatic analyses of NGS data will remain essential to end the HIV-1 pandemic.Entities:
Keywords: Antiretroviral therapy; HIV resistance; HIV-1; Low-frequency variants; Next-generation sequencing; Tropism
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Year: 2016 PMID: 27818211 DOI: 10.1016/j.virusres.2016.10.019
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Virus Res ISSN: 0168-1702 Impact factor: 3.303