Treatment intensification does not reduce residual HIV-1 viremia in patients on highly active antiretroviral therapy

Jason B. Dinoso(Johns Hopkins University), S. Y. Kim(Johns Hopkins University), Ann Wiegand(National Institutes of Health), Sarah Palmer(National Institutes of Health), Stephen J. Gange(Johns Hopkins University), Lisa M. Cranmer(Johns Hopkins University), Angeline O'Shea(National Institutes of Health), Marc Callender(Johns Hopkins University), Adam M. Spivak(Johns Hopkins University), Timothy Brennan(Johns Hopkins University), Mary F. Kearney(National Institutes of Health), Michael A. Proschan(National Institutes of Health), JoAnn M. Mican(National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases), Catherine Rehm(National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases), John M. Coffin(Tufts University), John W. Mellors(University of Pittsburgh), Robert F. Siliciano(Howard Hughes Medical Institute), Frank Maldarelli(National Institutes of Health)
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
May 22, 2009
Cited by 443Open Access
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Abstract

In HIV-1-infected individuals on currently recommended antiretroviral therapy (ART), viremia is reduced to <50 copies of HIV-1 RNA per milliliter, but low-level residual viremia appears to persist over the lifetimes of most infected individuals. There is controversy over whether the residual viremia results from ongoing cycles of viral replication. To address this question, we conducted 2 prospective studies to assess the effect of ART intensification with an additional potent drug on residual viremia in 9 HIV-1-infected individuals on successful ART. By using an HIV-1 RNA assay with single-copy sensitivity, we found that levels of viremia were not reduced by ART intensification with any of 3 different antiretroviral drugs (efavirenz, lopinavir/ritonavir, or atazanavir/ritonavir). The lack of response was not associated with the presence of drug-resistant virus or suboptimal drug concentrations. Our results suggest that residual viremia is not the product of ongoing, complete cycles of viral replication, but rather of virus output from stable reservoirs of infection.


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