HIV-1 Drug Resistance Mutations: Potential Applications for Point-of-Care Genotypic Resistance Testing

Soo‐Yon Rhee(Stanford University), Michael R. Jordan(Tufts University), Elliot Raizes(Centers for Disease Control and Prevention), Arlene Chua(Médecins Sans Frontières), Neil Parkin(First Consulting Group (United States)), Rami Kantor(Brown University), Gert U. van Zyl(National Health Laboratory Service), Irene Mukui(Ministry of Health), Mina C. Hosseinipour, Lisa M. Frenkel(University of Washington), Nicaise Ndembi(Institute of Human Virology), Raph L Hamers(University of Amsterdam), Tobias F. Rinke de Wit(Academic Medical Center), Carole L. Wallis(Lancet Laboratories), Ravindra K. Gupta(University College London), Joseph Fokam(Centre International De Reference Chantal Biya), Clement Zeh(Centers for Disease Control and Prevention), Jonathan Schapiro, Sergio Carmona(National Health Laboratory Service), David Katzenstein(Stanford University), Michele W. Tang(Stanford University), Avelin F. Aghokeng(Institut de Recherches Médicales et d’Etudes des Plantes Médicinales), Túlio de Oliveira(University of KwaZulu-Natal), Annemarie M. J. Wensing(University Medical Center Utrecht), Joel E. Gallant(Southwest Regional Wound Care Center), Mark A. Wainberg(Jewish General Hospital), Douglas D. Richman(VA San Diego Healthcare System), Joseph Fitzgibbon(National Institutes of Health), Marco Schito(Henry M. Jackson Foundation), Silvia Bertagnolio, Chunfu Yang(Centers for Disease Control and Prevention), Robert W. Shafer(Stanford University)
PLoS ONE
December 30, 2015
Cited by 95Open Access
Full Text

Abstract

The increasing prevalence of acquired and transmitted HIV-1 drug resistance is an obstacle to successful antiretroviral therapy (ART) in the low- and middle-income countries (LMICs) hardest hit by the HIV-1 pandemic. Genotypic drug resistance testing could facilitate the choice of initial ART in areas with rising transmitted drug resistance (TDR) and enable care-providers to determine which individuals with virological failure (VF) on a first- or second-line ART regimen require a change in treatment. An inexpensive near point-of-care (POC) genotypic resistance test would be useful in settings where the resources, capacity, and infrastructure to perform standard genotypic drug resistance testing are limited. Such a test would be particularly useful in conjunction with the POC HIV-1 viral load tests that are currently being introduced in LMICs. A POC genotypic resistance test is likely to involve the use of allele-specific point mutation assays for detecting drug-resistance mutations (DRMs). This study proposes that two major nucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitor (NRTI)-associated DRMs (M184V and K65R) and four major NNRTI-associated DRMs (K103N, Y181C, G190A, and V106M) would be the most useful for POC genotypic resistance testing in LMIC settings. One or more of these six DRMs was present in 61.2% of analyzed virus sequences from ART-naïve individuals with intermediate or high-level TDR and 98.8% of analyzed virus sequences from individuals on a first-line NRTI/NNRTI-containing regimen with intermediate or high-level acquired drug resistance. The detection of one or more of these DRMs in an ART-naïve individual or in a individual with VF on a first-line NRTI/NNRTI-containing regimen may be considered an indication for a protease inhibitor (PI)-containing regimen or closer virological monitoring based on cost-effectiveness or country policy.


Related Papers

No related papers found

Powered by citation graph analysis