Combinations of antiretroviral drugs are efficacious in the

Size: px
Start display at page:

Download "Combinations of antiretroviral drugs are efficacious in the"

Transcription

1 T h e n e w e ngl a nd j o u r na l o f m e dic i n e review article Mechanisms of Disease Development of Antiretroviral Drug Resistance Mark A. Wainberg, Ph.D., Gerasimos J. Zaharatos, M.D., and Bluma G. Brenner, Ph.D. Combinations of antiretroviral drugs are efficacious in the treatment of human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) infection, regardless of the viral subtype. However, the level of resistance to antiretroviral drugs differs among HIV variants. Indeed, we have limited knowledge of resistance mutations in non-b subtypes of HIV type 1 (HIV-1) and their clinical relevance, despite the fact that more than 90% of patients with HIV-1 infection worldwide have non subtype B variants of HIV-1. Most reports on drug resistance deal with subtype B infections in developed countries. Both enzymatic and virologic data indicate that naturally occurring polymorphisms among different HIV subtypes can influence HIV-1 susceptibility to individual antiretroviral drugs and the propensity of HIV to acquire certain resistance mutations. Furthermore, resistance pathways in different subtypes may affect drug cross-resistance and the potential use of specific secondline regimens. This concern may be increased in developing countries. Substantial natural genetic variation has led to the subclassification of HIV-1 group M (major) into nine subtypes (A through D, F through H, and J and K) and numer ous circulating recombinant forms (CRFs), such as CRF01_AE and CRF02_AG. 1 3 Although subtype B is most prevalent in Western countries, non-b subtypes predominate elsewhere (e.g., subtype C in sub-saharan Africa, India, and parts of Brazil; subtype CRF01_AE in Southeast Asia; subtype CRF02_AG in West Africa; and subtype A in eastern Europe and northern Asia. 1,4,5 Because of immigration, the proportion of non-b subtypes in North and South America and western Europe is increasing. 6-9 Despite advances in antiretroviral therapy that have revolutionized HIV management and the control of the spread of regional epidemics, resistance to antiretroviral drugs has emerged in all locales in which such drugs are used. This topic has been less well studied in subtypes other than subtype B, because of the predominance of the latter in the wealthy countries in which antiretroviral drugs were first introduced, as well as the availability of genotypic and phenotypic testing for resistance to antiretroviral drugs in such locations. 13 However, the potential for genetic differences among subtypes to yield different patterns of resistance-conferring mutations is supported by natural variation among HIV subtypes in genetic content for example, 40% variation in the viral envelope (env) gene and 8 to 10% variation in the polymerase (pol) and group-specific-antigen (gag) genes. This issue acquires special relevance in view of the fact that the HIV pol gene encodes each of the reverse-transcriptase, protease, and integrase enzymes that are the major targets of antiretroviral therapy. The distribution of HIV subtypes among immigrants to Quebec from African countries at the epicenter of the HIV pandemic illustrates intersubtype and intrasubtype diversity in the reverse-transcriptase protease region 14 From the McGill University AIDS Centre, Lady Davis Institute, Jewish General Hospital, Montreal. Address reprint requests to Dr. Wainberg at McGill University AIDS Centre, Lady Davis Institute, Jewish General Hospital, 3755 Côte-Sainte- Catherine Rd., Montreal, QC H3T 1E2, Canada, or at mark.wainberg@mcgill.ca. N Engl J Med 2011;365: Copyright 2011 Massachusetts Medical Society. n engl j med 365;7 nejm.org august 18,

2 T h e n e w e ngl a nd j o u r na l o f m e dic i n e An interactive graphic showing classes of antiretroviral drugs is available at NEJM.org (Fig. 1A). The global expansion and diversification of the pandemic reveal major epidemics of subtypes C (48%), A and CRF01_AE (12% and 5%, respectively), and G and CRF02_AG (8% and 5%, respectively) (Fig. 1B). 2,3 Differences in codon sequences at positions associated with drug-resistance mutations might predispose viral isolates of different subtypes to encode different amino acid substitutions, which might affect the rate of emergence of resistance (Table 1). 13,15 Such diversity might also affect cross-resistance to antiretroviral drugs within the same class, potentially affecting antiviral responsiveness and clinical outcomes (see the interactive graphic, available with the full text of this article at NEJM.org). 13 Biochemical and virologic data indicate that natural variation in amino acids can affect the magnitude of resistance conferred by certain resistance mutations. 16 For example, the related HIV type 2 (HIV-2) virus and group O HIV-1 viruses show high-level innate resistance to some nonnucleoside reverse-transcriptase inhibitors (NNRTIs) as a result of mutations in a reverse transcriptase that are present as natural polymorphisms (Table 1). 17,18 In addition, subtype differences in nucleotide and mutational motifs, which are defined as the number of transitions or transversions needed to develop resistance to different classes of antiretroviral drugs, may affect the genetic barrier for resistance. 19,20 For example, the signature codon 106 polymorphism that is unique to subtype C facilitates the development of the V106M mutation. Nucleoside R e v er se- Tr a nscr ip ta se Inhibi t or s Patients with subtype C HIV infection who were treated with a combination of nucleoside reversetranscriptase inhibitors (NRTIs) zidovudine and didanosine in Botswana were found to have a thymidine analogue mutations (TAM) pathway (67N/70R/215Y) 21 that was not commonly seen in patients with subtype C in India, South Africa, or Malawi Of concern, patients in areas in which subtype C was endemic had a high rate (approximately 20%) of the K65R multinucleosideresistance mutation, the K70E mutation, or both mutations after receiving drug regimens based on stavudine or didanosine K65R was also detected in 7 to 15% of patients in South Africa who did not have a response to first- or second-line regimens with stavudine, didanosine, or zidovudine as the nucleoside backbone. 27,28 In addition, studies from Israel reported high frequencies of K65R with treatment failure in subtype C viruses from Ethiopian immigrants, 29 and 10 to 12% of patients in India who received combination therapy with stavudine, lamivudine, and nevirapine as first-line therapy carried K65R. 23 Some of these differences in rates of acquisition of K65R or TAMs are doubtless due to treatment regimens and disease stage, as well as access to viral-load testing in many developing countries. This is underscored by the fact that timely introduction of second-line therapy after the failure of first-line therapy, which is commonly associated with resistance to M184V or NNRTI mutations (K103 N/S, G190A, Y181V, K101E, and V106A/M), should prevent the acquisition of TAMs or K65R. 22,23 Regional differences among subepidemics of subtype C virus in Ethiopia, Brazil, and sub-saharan Africa may also influence rates of resistance, as observed for resistance to NNRTIs. 13,24,30 These differences in K65R mutational profiles are related to subtype and the use of inappropriate drug regimens rather than to geographic considerations. Newer work now suggests that increased rates of K65R acquisition in subtype C may be due to the nature of the subtype C RNA template and not, for example, to the subtype origin of the viral reverse transcriptase In particular, subtype C viruses may be especially prone to pausing events at codon 65, facilitating the acquisition of K65R during reverse transcription. 32,33 In contrast, subtype B templates are prone to frequent pausing at codon 67, facilitating the generation of D67N and TAMs instead of K65R Indeed, ultrasensitive pyrosequencing methods have also shown that K65R can be selectively transmitted as minority species in some populations that have not received antiretroviral therapy Patients with newly acquired subtype C viruses were significantly more likely to have K65R than were those with subtype B infection who had not been treated (1.04% vs. 0.25%, P<0.001). 35,36 It is also true that K65R seems to develop more frequently in populations of patients with subtype C in whom regimens containing stavudine, didanosine, or tenofovir have failed. 38 The occur- 638 n engl j med 365;7 nejm.org august 18, 2011

3 mechanisms of disease rence of K65R in subtypes C and CRF01_AE has also been associated with the Y181C NNRTI mutation in some instances. 27,39 In contrast, K65R may be less common in subtype A than in other subtypes. 40 Patients in Burkina Faso carrying CRF06_cpx recombinant viruses had a higher propensity for the acquisition of TAMs than did those carrying CRF02_AG recombinant viruses. 41 A Distribution among African Immigrants F 2 D B F 1 C 1 C 2 Nonnucleoside R e v er se- Tr a nscr ip ta se Inhibi t or s CRF02_AG C 3 Initial guidelines from the World Health Organization (WHO) recommended the use of singledose nevirapine for the prevention of mother-tochild transmission of HIV. High frequencies of drug resistance were observed in 69% of women with subtype C, 36% of those with subtype D, 19% of those with subtype A, and 21% of those with subtype CRF02, despite the absence of resistance before the administration of antiretroviral therapy The use of ultrasensitive detection procedures, which reveal minority-species resistance, has shown even higher percentages of patients with nevirapine-resistance mutations (K103N and Y181C), reaching 70 to 87% of patients with subtype C infection, as compared with 42% of patients with subtype A who have resistance mutations These findings underscore the role of viral subtype in facilitating the development of drug resistance, which is exacerbated by the fact that resistance to NNRTIs can also be transmitted through breast-feeding. 49 Current guidelines for the prevention of maternal transmission recommend that triple-drug combinations be used to prevent the occurrence of drug resistance. 50,51 A V106M mutation is commonly selected in subtype C viruses (in approximately 30% of patients) after exposure to nevirapine or efavirenz, whereas a V106A substitution is only rarely selected (in approximately 5% of patients) by the same NNRTIs in other subtypes. This is due to a subtype-c specific polymorphism in reverse transcriptase at codon ,53 and has been shown to be clinically relevant in regions in which subtype C is endemic (Table 1). 21,23,54-58 Nevertheless, K103N and Y181C mutations remain important in both subtypes B and C, with K103N occurring in 40% of subtype B and 29% of subtype C viruses and Y181C occurring in 23% of subtype B and 12% of subtype C viruses. 59 Another substitution that G CRF06_A/G/J/K 0.02 B Global Distribution Other AG/G J/K A/AE B C AC A/CRF01_AE Figure 1. Distribution of HIV Subtypes among Immigrants to Quebec from Africa and Global Distribution of Subtypes. Panel A shows a phylogenetic analysis of the reverse-transcriptase protease region of non-b subtype infections in samples obtained from 909 immigrants to Quebec (approximately 15% of patients affected by the provincial epidemic), revealing 10% intersubtype viral diversity from francophone African countries at the epicenter of the pandemic. Subtypes C 1, C 2, and C 3 reflect intrasubtype C regional variations from southern regions (Zimbabwe and Botswana), central regions (Burundi and Rwanda), and eastern regions (Ethiopia and Kenya), respectively. Subtypes A, G, CRF02_AG, CRF06_A/G/J/K, and other circulating recombinant forms predominate in western regions (Benin and Ivory Coast) and central regions (Congo and Cameroon). Panel B shows how the distribution of subtypes in Quebec parallels the global prevalence of non-b subtypes worldwide. Data are from the World Health Organization UNAIDS HIV Vaccine Initiative. n engl j med 365;7 nejm.org august 18,

4 T h e n e w e ngl a nd j o u r na l o f m e dic i n e Table 1. Potential Effect of Subtype Diversity on Drug Resistance.* Type of Resistance and Subtype Drug Class Resistance Mutations and Polymorphisms NRTIs NNRTIs Protease Inhibitors Primary resistance O Multidrug NA Y181C, A98S, K103R, E138A, V179E HIV-2 Multidrug L210N, T215S, K219N Secondary resistance L10I/V, K20V, V32I, M36I, M46I, I47V, L63E/K, A71V, G73A, V77T, V82IL Y181I, Y188L, G190A, L63E/K, A71V, G73A, V77T, K101A, V106I, V179I V82IL A and AE Protease NA NA I13V, M36I, L89M AG Protease NA NA I13V, K20I, M36I G Protease NA A98S I13V, K20I, M36, V82I, L89M C Protease NA NA M36I, L89M F Protease NA NA M36I, K57R, L89M Frequency of Natural Mutation Frequency of PI Pathways in Nelfinavir Failure L89M D30N L90M L89I/V/T percent Natural mutation affecting protease resistance pathway B A and AE AG G C F Nucleotide polymorphisms affecting genetic barrier Backbone for V106M (ATG) Selection Natural Changes Needed Frequency of V106M in NNRTI Failure B GTA 2 <1 percent C GTG Nucleotide motif affecting genetic barrier Codon Motif K65R Frequency in Failure of Stavudine, Didanosine, Abacavir, or Tenofovir B AAG-AAA-AAA <5 percent C AAA-AAG-AAG 7 30 * The percentages of each mutation at the time of treatment failure are dependent on the backbone regimen used and the extent to which undetected treatment failure has persisted. NA denotes not applicable, NRTI nucleoside reverse-transcriptase inhibitor, NNRTI nonnucleoside reverse-transcriptase inhibitor, and PI protease inhibitor. PI resistance pathways in nelfinavir failure are based on data accessed from the Stanford University HIV Drug Resistance Database. 640 n engl j med 365;7 nejm.org august 18, 2011

5 mechanisms of disease is seen more frequently among patients with subtype C virus is G190A, which is also a result of naturally occurring G190A/S polymorphisms. 55 Reverse-transcriptase polymorphisms at residue 98, which are common in subtype G, are also associated with NNRTI resistance in subtype B. 60 Only minor differences in drug-resistance pathways among subtypes A, B, and C have been observed with etravirine, a second-generation NNRTI. 54 Pro te a se Inhibi t or s Among patients in whom therapy with nelfinavir (a drug with a low genetic barrier for resistance) fails, the D30N mutation, which is associated with treatment failure in subtype B viruses, is not commonly observed in subtypes G, CRF02_AG, and CRF02_AE isolates. Rather, the L90M pathway is favored in the latter subtypes. 61 Although subtype C isolates from Ethiopian immigrants to Israel favored the L90M pathway, patients with subtype C viruses in Botswana did have D30N, suggesting that subtype C viruses from Ethiopia and southern Africa might be different. 62,63 The basis for the higher preponderance of D30N in subtype B than in other subtypes may be related to the flexibility of the protease flap region and destabilization of the protease-inhibitor complex in subtype B, whereas an accessory N83T mutation may be needed to rescue fitness and confer resistance in subtype C. 64,65 L89M polymorphisms that are observed in subtypes C, F, and G can also lead to M89I/V mutations, and a V82I polymorphism in subtype G is of apparent importance in the emergence of I82 M/T/S resistance after treatment failure 66 (Table 1). The L90M resistance mutation is common in subtype B from Brazil but rare in subtype F. 67 Polymorphisms at position 36 in protease may play ancillary roles in determining the emergence of specific resistance mutations among viruses of different subtypes. 68 Differences in polymorphisms in the protease gene have been reported among non-b subtypes; these include protease residues 10, 20, and 63 in subtype A; residues 20, 53, 63, 74, and 82 in subtype C; residues 13 and 20 in subtype D; residues 10, 14, 20, and 77 in subtype F; residues 20, 67, 73, 82, and 88 in subtype G; residues 20, 63, 82, and 89 in subtype CRF01_AE; and residue 20 in subtype CRF02_AG. 69,70 Increased rates of emergence of NRTI and protease-inhibitor resistance mutations and equal rates of emergence of NNRTI mutations in subtype B, as compared with subtype C, have also been reported. 71 In southern Brazil, scientists reported a lower relative frequency of primary resistance to protease inhibitors in subtype C than in subtype B. 72 However, subtype diversity may not limit the initial benefits of antiretroviral therapy, despite clear evidence for the preferential emergence of some mutations, such as V82M in proteases in some non-b subtypes, V82M in subtype G versus V82A/F/S in other subtypes, or N88D in subtype B versus N88S in subtypes C and CRF02_AG. 73 Major mutations also compromise the efficacy of NRTIs, NNRTIs, and protease inhibitors in the related HIV-2 virus, which has innate resistance to several NNRTIs (Table 1). 74,75 Some minor mutations in subtype B protease may appear as frequent natural polymorphisms in several non-b subtypes (e.g., M36I and L89M), 67,68 and the L89M polymorphism can lead to the M89I major resistance mutation for protease inhibitors (Table 1). Diminished susceptibilities among wild-type isolates have been found for CRF02_AG recombinant viruses in three different studies of nelfinavir and atazanavir. 60,70,76 One study suggested that distortions in the K26 pocket of the A/G protease may be responsible for a lower binding energy of nelfinavir and lower susceptibility of A/G viruses. 76 Although CRF02_AG isolates with lower susceptibilities to certain protease inhibitors (nelfinavir and atazanavir) have been identified, only one study detected diminished atazanavir susceptibilities among wild-type isolates. 77 In regard to nelfinavir resistance, competition assays support a lower fitness of subtype C viruses bearing D30N, which could explain the absence of this mutation in some subtype C isolates. 65 The protease and gag genes coevolve as a functional unit when HIV is subjected to drug pressure from protease inhibitors. Mutations in gag can act as compensatory substitutions that can increase both rates and levels of resistance to protease inhibitors, as well as viral replication capacity. 78 No genotypic system for the determination of drug resistance to protease inhibitors currently monitors gag, despite the fact that relevant mutations in gag can increase resistance by a factor of 2 to 2.5, depending on the subtype. It is n engl j med 365;7 nejm.org august 18,

6 T h e n e w e ngl a nd j o u r na l o f m e dic i n e likely that different subtypes could develop compensatory gag mutations at different rates; this might ultimately justify the genotyping of gag in resistance testing. In tegr a se Inhibi t or s Resistance to integrase inhibitors in patients in whom raltegravir- and elvitegravir-based regimens fail is associated with three main pathways involving key mutations at positions N155H, Q148K/R/H, and Y143R/C within the integrase gene, with polymorphisms among subtypes that may affect resistance and viral-replication capacity. 20,79-84 Given a modest genetic barrier to resistance for these compounds, clinical failure may result from the use of suboptimal regimen backbones or interactive effects of reverse-transcriptase and protease resistance. 85,86 Signature subtype differences in integrase at codons 140, 148, 151, 157, and 160 among HIV subtypes may affect the genetic barrier for resistance. 20 These variations predict higher genetic barriers to the development of G140S and G140C mutations in subtypes C, CRF02_AG, and A/CRF01_AE, as well as higher genetic barriers to V151I in subtypes CRF02_AG and CRF01_AE. 20,87 The E157Q and E160Q mutational motifs were observed in 35% of subtype C isolates, indicating intrasubtype variations. 87 Nucleotide motifs at codons 155 and 143 are highly conserved among subtypes. 20 These findings suggest that some sequence variations might not promote resistance through the Q148R/H/K and G140S pathways in subtypes A, CRF02_AG, and C. 20,87 Despite a 40% difference in integrase sequence between HIV-2 and HIV-1, the pathways to raltegravir resistance are similar. 88 If it is confirmed that the genetic barrier for resistance to integrase inhibitors is higher in non-b subtypes than in subtype B, this finding may have clinical relevance in many developing countries. 20,87 En tr y Inhibi t or s Although drugs that target viral entry are still in various phases of development, the high level of diversity (20 to 40%) in the env region predicts that this class of drugs will probably have higher potential for natural and emergent drug resistance. Clinical data have shown that the fusion inhibitor enfuvirtide is active against non-b subtypes owing to a highly conserved binding domain, although HIV-2 and HIV-1 class O viruses have natural resistance against this drug. 89,90 The CCR5 inhibitor maraviroc also has activity against multiple subtypes. Biol o gic a nd Clinic a l R eleva nce Compelling biochemical and virologic data illustrate the differential effect of genetic background on both the type and degree of HIV-1 resistance to antiretroviral drugs, as has been documented for resistance to NRTIs, NNRTIs, and protease inhibitors. For protease inhibitors, genetic background, including polymorphisms in each subtype, can affect the extent to which primary mutations alter protein binding or protease function. Hence, some polymorphisms can act as the equivalent of secondary resistance mutations. It is important to continue to do research on the role of polymorphisms in the development of drug resistance. In some cases, drug exposure may lead to amplification of such polymorphisms as A98G/S in reverse transcriptase and M36I, K20I, and L89M in protease, leading to a potential for resistance. 91 In parts of Africa, treatment failure has been reported in as many as 40% of patients after 2 years. 92 Resistance rates of more than 80% to two drug classes have been reported in India after failure of first-line regimens using combinations of NRTIs and NNRTIs. 93 Studies are needed to assess genotypes both before and after therapy in the context of possible associations between polymorphisms and drug resistance. This area of research could include polymorphism variability in variants of the same subtype in different geographic regions. This information might improve the efficacy of certain drug combinations over others in the context of second- or third-line therapeutic strategies. As access to antiretroviral therapy in resourcepoor countries increases, it remains imperative to establish appropriate treatment strategies for longterm clinical benefit that limit the emergence of drug resistance. The use of nontoxic, effective antiretroviral drugs should yield excellent clinical responsiveness, regardless of the viral subtype. Subtype differences, suboptimal therapies, and deficiencies in health care delivery systems can create conditions for accelerated development of 642 n engl j med 365;7 nejm.org august 18, 2011

7 mechanisms of disease resistance. There also remains an urgent need for low-cost viral-load monitoring to prevent and detect drug resistance, as well as to avoid unnecessary treatment switches Unfortunately, pooling of resistance data often masks the role of regional differences in viral subtypes and antiretroviral therapies in the development of drug resistance. 13 In resource-poor settings, such studies have used different NRTI backbones (e.g., combinations of zidovudine and didanosine, zidovudine and lamivudine, or stavudine and lamivudine). Larger longitudinal studies are needed to determine the response to firstline combinations of antiretroviral drugs. The availability of genotypic resistance testing both before and after therapy needs to be expanded to include all countries in which antiretroviral drugs are used. Phenotypic assays have not detected significant differences in antiretroviral-drug susceptibility between B subtypes and non-b subtypes, findings that are consistent with biochemical data obtained with recombinant reverse transcriptase and protease. This is doubtless the reason that all HIV subtypes should respond in more or less equivalent fashion to good drug regimens. However, some polymorphisms in non-b viruses may act as secondary resistance mutations on the basis of their emergence in subtype B viruses after exposure to antiretroviral drugs, and it may often be difficult to extrapolate the effect of such polymorphisms in non-b subtypes. For example, the I93L substitution causes hypersusceptibility to some protease inhibitors in subtype C but is a secondary resistance mutation in subtype B. 65 Although it is tempting to speculate that rates of acquisition of resistance could have important implications for the durability of treatment efficacy, this is likely to be true only for the use of substandard drug regimens. As an example, the K65R mutation emerges faster in subtype C than in subtype B, 19,27 and biochemical mechanisms explain that this difference relates to the manner in which subtype C templates are processed by HIV-1 reverse transcriptase ,97 K65R has also been seen in approximately 70% of patients in whom didanosine-containing regimens fail in Bots wana 25 and in high proportions (approximately 20%) of patients who do not have a response to stavudine, lamivudine, and nevirapine in Malawi, India, and South Africa. 38,98,99 In contrast, K65R is uncommon among patients with subtypes B and C who have received either tenofovir or a combination of tenofovir and emtricitabine as part of triple antiretroviral-drug therapy. 27 Although this reflects the use of welltolerated, effective drugs that have long intracellular half-lives and that act in combination to suppress viral replication and prevent the emergence of resistance mutations, larger numbers of patients and follow-up will be required to determine whether any consistent effect of the emergence of K65R in subtype C is clinically relevant. The strong association between K65R selection and nevirapine is also of concern in regard to the synergistic fitness interactions that have been observed for the K65R, Y181C, and G190A/S mutations The use of tenofovir- or zidovudinebased regimens can offset the development of K65R in subtype C HIV infections. 103,104 Cross-resistance among drugs is important, especially in settings in which treatment options may be limited. Relatively few in vitro comparative data are available for protease inhibitors in non-b subtypes, yet such data may be crucial for an understanding of cross-resistance to protease inhibitors. 67,68 Such data are important, since protease inhibitors are often the only available option for drug sequencing in resource-limited settings after the failure of first- or second-line treatment. The fact that resistance to protease inhibitors usually requires the presence of large numbers of resistance mutations may mean that the contribution of any single mutation to drug resistance is minor, an advantage of using drugs with a high genetic barrier for the development of resistance. Hence, differences among subtypes with regard to drug resistance are likely to be more important for NRTIs, NNRTIs, and integrase inhibitors than for protease inhibitors. Summ a r y An urgent global priority is the optimization of treatment strategies for HIV infection, regardless of geographic locale. It is reassuring that current antiretroviral strategies appear to be effective against a broad spectrum of HIV subtypes. Suboptimal therapies that include such drugs as stavudine and didanosine can facilitate the selection of the K65R mutation, which, in turn, may limit many secondary treatment options. In addi- n engl j med 365;7 nejm.org august 18,

8 T h e n e w e ngl a nd j o u r na l o f m e dic i n e tion, suboptimal regimens put patients at risk for the development of NNRTI-resistance mutations. An understanding of drug-resistance patterns among non-b subtype infections may help to optimize the selection of first-line regimens and limit the acquisition of resistance. Disclosure forms provided by the authors are available with the full text of this article at NEJM.org. References 1. Ariën KK, Vanham G, Arts EJ. Is HIV-1 evolving to a less virulent form in humans? Nat Rev Microbiol 2007;5: Hemelaar J, Gouws E, Ghys PD, Osmanov S. Global trends in molecular epidemiology of HIV-1 during AIDS 2011;25: Tebit DM, Arts EJ. Tracking a century of global expansion and evolution of HIV to drive understanding and to combat disease. Lancet Infect Dis 2011;11: Soares EA, Santos RP, Pellegrini JA, Sprinz E, Tanuri A, Soares MA. Epidemiologic and molecular characterization of human immunodeficiency virus type 1 in southern Brazil. J Acquir Immune Defic Syndr 2003;34: Soares EA, Martínez AM, Souza TM, et al. HIV-1 subtype C dissemination in southern Brazil. AIDS 2005;19:Suppl 4: S81-S Brennan CA, Brites C, Bodelle P, et al. HIV-1 strains identified in Brazilian blood donors: significant prevalence of B/F1 recombinants. AIDS Res Hum Retroviruses 2007;23: Locateli D, Stoco PH, de Queiroz AT, et al. Molecular epidemiology of HIV-1 in Santa Catarina State confirms increases of subtype C in southern Brazil. J Med Virol 2007;79: Holguín A, de Mulder M, Yebra G, López M, Soriano V. Increase of non-b subtypes and recombinants among newly diagnosed HIV-1 native Spaniards and immigrants in Spain. Curr HIV Res 2008;6: Descamps D, Chaix ML, André P, et al. French national sentinel survey of antiretroviral drug resistance in patients with HIV-1 primary infection and in antiretroviral-naive chronically infected patients in J Acquir Immune Defic Syndr 2005;38: Palella FJ Jr, Delaney KM, Moorman AC, et al. Declining morbidity and mortality among patients with advanced human immunodeficiency virus infection. N Engl J Med 1998;338: Montaner JS, Lima VD, Barrios R, et al. Association of highly active antiretroviral therapy coverage, population viral load, and yearly new HIV diagnoses in British Columbia, Canada: a populationbased study. Lancet 2010;376: Johnston KM, Levy AR, Lima VD, et al. Expanding access to HAART: a cost-effective approach for treating and preventing HIV. AIDS 2010;24: Brenner BG. Resistance and viral subtypes: how important are the differences and why do they occur? Curr Opin HIV AIDS 2007;2: Akouamba BS, Viel J, Charest H, et al. HIV-1 genetic diversity in antenatal cohort, Canada. Emerg Infect Dis 2005;11: Kantor R. Impact of HIV-1 pol diversity on drug resistance and its clinical implications. Curr Opin Infect Dis 2006;19: Martínez-Cajas JL, Pant-Pai N, Klein MB, Wainberg MA. Role of genetic diversity amongst HIV-1 non-b subtypes in drug resistance: a systematic review of virologic and biochemical evidence. AIDS Rev 2008; 10: Descamps D, Collin G, Letourneur F, et al. Susceptibility of human immunodeficiency virus type 1 group O isolates to antiretroviral agents: in vitro phenotypic and genotypic analyses. J Virol 1997;71: Tuaillon E, Gueudin M, Lemée V, et al. Phenotypic susceptibility to nonnucleoside inhibitors of virion-associated reverse transcriptase from different HIV types and groups. J Acquir Immune Defic Syndr 2004;37: Brenner BG, Oliveira M, Doualla-Bell F, et al. HIV-1 subtype C viruses rapidly develop K65R resistance to tenofovir in cell culture. AIDS 2006;20:F9-F Maïga AI, Malet I, Soulie C, et al. Genetic barriers for integrase inhibitor drug resistance in HIV type-1 B and CRF02_AG subtypes. Antivir Ther 2009;14: Novitsky V, Wester CW, DeGruttola V, et al. The reverse transcriptase 67N 70R 215Y genotype is the predominant TAM pathway associated with virologic failure among HIV type 1C-infected adults treated with ZDV/ddI-containing HAART in southern Africa. AIDS Res Hum Retroviruses 2007;23: Barth RE, Wensing AM, Tempelman HA, Moraba R, Schuurman R, Hoepelman AI. Rapid accumulation of nonnucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitor-associated resistance: evidence of transmitted resistance in rural South Africa. AIDS 2008; 22: Deshpande A, Jauvin V, Magnin N, et al. Resistance mutations in subtype C HIV type 1 isolates from Indian patients of Mumbai receiving NRTIs plus NNRTIs and experiencing a treatment failure: resistance to AR. AIDS Res Hum Retroviruses 2007;23: Hosseinipour MC, van Oosterhout JJ, Weigel R, et al. The public health approach to identify antiretroviral therapy failure: high-level nucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitor resistance among Malawians failing first-line antiretroviral therapy. AIDS 2009;23: Doualla-Bell F, Avalos A, Brenner B, et al. High prevalence of the K65R mutation in human immunodeficiency virus type 1 subtype C isolates from infected patients in Botswana treated with didanosine-based regimens. Antimicrob Agents Chemother 2006;50: Doualla-Bell F, Gaolathe T, Avalos A, et al. Five-year follow up of genotypic resistance patterns in HIV-1 subtype C infected patients in Botswana after failure of thymidine analogue-based regimens. J Int AIDS Soc 2009;12: Brenner BG, Coutsinos D. The K65R mutation in HIV-1 reverse transcriptase: genetic barriers, resistance profile and clinical implications. HIV Ther 2009;3: Orrell C, Walensky RP, Losina E, Pitt J, Freedberg KA, Wood R. HIV type-1 clade C resistance genotypes in treatment-naive patients and after first virological failure in a large community antiretroviral therapy programme. Antivir Ther 2009;14: Turner D, Shahar E, Katchman E, et al. Prevalence of the K65R resistance reverse transcriptase mutation in different HIV-1 subtypes in Israel. J Med Virol 2009;81: Ayele W, Mekonnen Y, Messele T, et al. Differences in HIV type 1 RNA plasma load profile of closely related cocirculating Ethiopian subtype C strains: C and C. AIDS Res Hum Retroviruses 2010;26: Invernizzi CF, Coutsinos D, Oliveira M, Moisi D, Brenner BG, Wainberg MA. Signature nucleotide polymorphisms at positions 64 and 65 in reverse transcriptase favor the selection of the K65R resistance mutation in HIV-1 subtype C. J Infect Dis 2009;200: Coutsinos D, Invernizzi CF, Xu H, Brenner BG, Wainberg MA. Factors affecting template usage in the development of K65R resistance in subtype C variants of HIV type-1. Antivir Chem Chemother 2010;20: Coutsinos D, Invernizzi CF, Xu H, et al. Template usage is responsible for the preferential acquisition of the K65R reverse transcriptase mutation in subtype C variants of human immunodeficiency virus type 1. J Virol 2009;83: n engl j med 365;7 nejm.org august 18, 2011

9 mechanisms of disease 34. Harrigan PR Sheen CW, Gill VS, et al. Silent mutations are selected in HIV-1 reverse transcriptase and affect enzymatic efficiency. AIDS 2008;22: Varghese V, Wang E, Babrzadeh F, et al. Nucleic acid template and the risk of a PCR-induced HIV-1 drug resistance mutation. PLoS ONE 2010;5(6):e D Aquila RT, Geretti AM, Horton JH, et al. Tenofovir (TDF)-selected or abacavir (ABC)-selected low-frequency HIV type 1 subpopulations during failure with persistent viremia as detected by ultradeep pyrosequencing. AIDS Res Hum Retroviruses 2011;27: Li JF, Lipscomb JT, Wei X, et al. Detection of low-level K65R variants in nucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitor-naive chronic and acute HIV-1 subtype C infections. J Infect Dis 2011;203: Deshpande A, Jeannot AC, Schrive MH, Wittkop L, Pinson P, Fleury HJ. Analysis of RT sequences of subtype C HIVtype 1 isolates from Indian patients at failure of a first-line treatment according to clinical and/or immunological WHO guidelines. AIDS Res Hum Retroviruses 2010;26: Zolfo M, Schapiro JM, Phan V, et al. Genotypic impact of prolonged detectable HIV type 1 RNA viral load after HAART failure in a CRF01_AE-infected cohort. AIDS Res Hum Retroviruses 2010 November 23 (Epub ahead of print). 40. Gupta RK, Chrystie IL, O Shea S, Mullen JE, Kulasegaram R, Tong CY. K65R and Y181C are less prevalent in HAARTexperienced HIV-1 subtype A patients. AIDS 2005;19: Tebit DM, Sangaré L, Makamtse A, et al. HIV drug resistance pattern among HAART-exposed patients with suboptimal virological response in Ouagadougou, Burkina Faso. J Acquir Immune Defic Syndr 2008;49: Toni TD, Masquelier B, Lazaro E, et al. Characterization of nevirapine (NVP) resistance mutations and HIV type 1 subtype in women from Abidjan (Cote d Ivoire) after NVP single-dose prophylaxis of HIV type 1 mother-to-child transmission. AIDS Res Hum Retroviruses 2005;21: Eshleman SH, Hoover DR, Chen S, et al. Nevirapine (NVP) resistance in women with HIV-1 subtype C, compared with subtypes A and D, after the administration of single-dose NVP. J Infect Dis 2005;192: Eshleman SH, Church JD, Chen S, et al. Comparison of HIV-1 mother-to-child transmission after single-dose nevirapine prophylaxis among African women with subtypes A, C, and D. J Acquir Immune Defic Syndr 2006;42: Chaix ML, Ekouevi DK, Rouet F, et al. Low risk of nevirapine resistance mutations in the prevention of mother-to-child transmission of HIV-1: Agence Nationale de Recherches sur le SIDA Ditrame Plus, Abidjan, Cote d Ivoire. J Infect Dis 2006; 193: Johnson JA, Li JF, Morris L, et al. Emergence of drug-resistant HIV-1 after intrapartum administration of singledose nevirapine is substantially underestimated. J Infect Dis 2005;192: Flys TS, Chen S, Jones DC, et al. Quantitative analysis of HIV-1 variants with the K103N resistance mutation after single-dose nevirapine in women with HIV-1 subtypes A, C, and D. J Acquir Immune Defic Syndr 2006;42: Flys T, Nissley DV, Claasen CW, et al. Sensitive drug-resistance assays reveal long-term persistence of HIV-1 variants with the K103N nevirapine (NVP) resistance mutation in some women and infants after the administration of singledose NVP: HIVNET 012. J Infect Dis 2005; 192: Zeh C, Weidle PJ, Nafisa L, et al. HIV-1 drug resistance emergence among breastfeeding infants born to HIV-infected mothers during a single-arm trial of triple-antiretroviral prophylaxis for prevention of mother-to-child transmission: a secondary analysis. PLoS Med 2011;8(3):e Shah M, Johns B, Abimiku A, Walker DG. Cost-effectiveness of new WHO recommendations for prevention of motherto-child transmission of HIV in a resourcelimited setting. AIDS 2011;25: Thomas TK, Masaba R, Borkowf CB, et al. Triple-antiretroviral prophylaxis to prevent mother-to-child HIV transmission through breastfeeding the Kisumu Breastfeeding Study, Kenya: a clinical trial. PLoS Med 2011;8(3):e Loemba H, Brenner B, Parniak MA, et al. Genetic divergence of human immunodeficiency virus type 1 Ethiopian clade C reverse transcriptase (RT) and rapid development of resistance against nonnucleoside inhibitors of RT. Antimicrob Agents Chemother 2002;46: Brenner B, Turner D, Oliveira M, et al. A V106M mutation in HIV-1 clade C viruses exposed to efavirenz confers crossresistance to non-nucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitors. AIDS 2003;17:F1-F Lai MT, Lu M, Felock PJ, et al. Distinct mutation pathways of non-subtype B HIV-1 during in vitro resistance selection with nonnucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitors. Antimicrob Agents Chemother 2010; 54: Grossman Z, Istomin V, Averbuch D, et al. Genetic variation at NNRTI resistance-associated positions in patients infected with HIV-1 subtype C. AIDS 2004; 18: Marconi VC, Sunpath H, Lu Z, et al. Prevalence of HIV-1 drug resistance after failure of a first highly active antiretroviral therapy regimen in KwaZulu Natal, South Africa. Clin Infect Dis 2008;46: Hsu LY, Subramaniam R, Bacheler L, Paton NI. Characterization of mutations in CRF01_AE virus isolates from antiretroviral treatment-naive and -experienced patients in Singapore. J Acquir Immune Defic Syndr 2005;38: Rajesh L, Karunaianantham R, Narayanan PR, Swaminathan S. Antiretroviral drug-resistant mutations at baseline and at time of failure of antiretroviral therapy in HIV type 1-coinfected TB patients. AIDS Res Hum Retroviruses 2009;25: Shafer RW. Rationale and uses of a public HIV drug-resistance database. J Infect Dis 2006;194:Suppl 1:S51-S Sylla M, Chamberland A, Boileau C, et al. Characterization of drug resistance in antiretroviral-treated patients infected with HIV-1 CRF02_AG and AGK subtypes in Mali and Burkina Faso. Antivir Ther 2008;13: Sukasem C, Churdboonchart V, Sukeepaisarncharoen W, et al. Genotypic resistance profiles in antiretroviral-naive HIV-1 infections before and after initiation of first-line HAART: impact of polymorphism on resistance to therapy. Int J Antimicrob Agents 2008;31: Grossman Z, Paxinos EE, Averbuch D, et al. Mutation D30N is not preferentially selected by human immunodeficiency virus type 1 subtype C in the development of resistance to nelfinavir. Antimicrob Agents Chemother 2004;48: Doualla-Bell F, Avalos A, Gaolathe T, et al. Impact of human immunodeficiency virus type 1 subtype C on drug resistance mutations in patients from Botswana failing a nelfinavir-containing regimen. Antimicrob Agents Chemother 2006;50: Soares RO, Batista PR, Costa MG, Dardenne LE, Pascutti PG, Soares MA. Understanding the HIV-1 protease nelfinavir resistance mutation D30N in subtypes B and C through molecular dynamics simulations. J Mol Graph Model 2010;29: Gonzalez LM, Brindeiro RM, Aguiar RS, et al. Impact of nelfinavir resistance mutations on in vitro phenotype, fitness, and replication capacity of human immunodeficiency virus type 1 with subtype B and C proteases. Antimicrob Agents Chemother 2004;48: Dumans AT, Soares MA, Machado ES, et al. Synonymous genetic polymorphisms within Brazilian human immunodeficiency virus Type 1 subtypes may influence mutational routes to drug resistance. J Infect Dis 2004;189: Calazans A, Brindeiro R, Brindeiro P, et al. Low accumulation of L90M in protease from subtype F HIV-1 with resistance to protease inhibitors is caused by the L89M polymorphism. J Infect Dis 2005;191: Lisovsky I, Schader SM, Martinez- Cajas JL, Oliveira M, Moisi D, Wainberg n engl j med 365;7 nejm.org august 18,

10 mechanisms of disease MA. HIV-1 protease codon 36 polymorphisms and differential development of resistance to nelfinavir, lopinavir, and atazanavir in different HIV-1 subtypes. Antimicrob Agents Chemother 2010;54: Kantor R, Katzenstein D. Polymorphism in HIV-1 non-subtype B protease and reverse transcriptase and its potential impact on drug susceptibility and drug resistance evolution. AIDS Rev 2003;5: Kantor R, Katzenstein DA, Efron B, et al. Impact of HIV-1 subtype and antiretroviral therapy on protease and reverse transcriptase genotype: results of a global collaboration. PLoS Med 2005;2(4):e Soares EA, Santos AF, Sousa TM, et al. Differential drug resistance acquisition in HIV-1 of subtypes B and C. PLoS ONE 2007;2(1):e Sprinz E, Netto EM, Patelli M, et al. Primary antiretroviral drug resistance among HIV type 1-infected individuals in Brazil. AIDS Res Hum Retroviruses 2009; 25: Kantor R, Shafer RW, Katzenstein D. The HIV-1 Non-subtype B Workgroup: an international collaboration for the collection and analysis of HIV-1 non-subtype B data. J Int AIDS Soc 2005;7: Gottlieb GS, Badiane NM, Hawes SE, et al. Emergence of multiclass drug-resistance in HIV-2 in antiretroviral-treated individuals in Senegal: implications for HIV-2 treatment in resouce-limited West Africa. Clin Infect Dis 2009;48: [Erratum, Clin Infect Dis 2009;48:848.] 75. Ntemgwa ML, d Aquin Toni T, Brenner BG, Camacho RJ, Wainberg MA. Antiretroviral drug resistance in human immunodeficiency virus type 2. Antimicrob Agents Chemother 2009;53: Kinomoto M, Appiah-Opong R, Brandful JA, et al. HIV-1 proteases from drugnaive West African patients are differentially less susceptible to protease inhibitors. Clin Infect Dis 2005;41: Fleury HJ, Toni T, Lan NT, et al. Susceptibility to antiretroviral drugs of CRF01_AE, CRF02_AG, and subtype C viruses from untreated patients of Africa and Asia: comparative genotypic and phenotypic data. AIDS Res Hum Retroviruses 2006;22: van Maarseveen N, Boucher C. Resistance to protease inhibitors. In: Geretti AM, ed. Antiretroviral resistance in clinical practice. London: Mediscript, 2006: Fransen S, Karmochkine M, Huang W, Weiss L, Petropoulos CJ, Charpentier C. Longitudinal analysis of raltegravir susceptibility and integrase replication capacity of human immunodeficiency virus type 1 during virologic failure. Antimicrob Agents Chemother 2009;53: Charpentier C, Karmochkine M, Laureillard D, et al. Drug resistance profiles for the HIV integrase gene in patients failing raltegravir salvage therapy. HIV Med 2008;9: Malet I, Delelis O, Valantin MA, et al. Mutations associated with failure of raltegravir treatment affect integrase sensitivity to the inhibitor in vitro. Antimicrob Agents Chemother 2008;52: Ceccherini-Silberstein F, Malet I, D Arrigo R, Antinori A, Marcelin AG, Perno CF. Characterization and structural analysis of HIV-1 integrase conservation. AIDS Rev 2009;11: Quercia R, Dam E, Perez-Bercoff D, Clavel F. Selective-advantage profile of human immunodeficiency virus type 1 integrase mutants explains in vivo evolution of raltegravir resistance genotypes. J Virol 2009;83: Garrido C, de Mendoza C. Do integrase inhibitors impact on the HIV reservoir. AIDS Rev 2010;12: Buzon MJ, Dalmau J, Puertas MC, Puig J, Clotet B, Martinez-Picado J. The HIV-1 integrase genotype strongly predicts raltegravir susceptibility but not viral fitness of primary virus isolates. AIDS 2010;24: Fransen S, Gupta S, Danovich R, et al. Loss of raltegravir susceptibility by human immunodeficiency virus type 1 is conferred via multiple nonoverlapping genetic pathways. J Virol 2009;83: Brenner BG, Lowe M, Moisi D, et al. Subtype diversity associated with the development of HIV-1 resistance to integrase inhibitors. J Med Virol 2011;83: Charpentier C, Roquebert B, Delelis O, et al. Hot spots of integrase genotypic changes leading to HIV-2 resistance to raltegravir. Antimicrob Agents Chemother 2011;55: Poveda E, Rodes B, Toro C, Soriano V. Are fusion inhibitors active against all HIV variants? AIDS Res Hum Retroviruses 2004;20: Aghokeng AF, Ewane L, Awazi B, et al. Enfuvirtide binding domain is highly conserved in non-b HIV type 1 strains from Cameroon, West Central Africa. AIDS Res Hum Retroviruses 2005;21: Velazquez-Campoy A, Vega S, Freire E. Amplification of the effects of drug resistance mutations by background polymorphisms in HIV-1 protease from African subtypes. Biochemistry 2002;41: Nachega JB, Hislop M, Dowdy DW, Chaisson RE, Regensberg L, Maartens G. Adherence to nonnucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitor-based HIV therapy and virologic outcomes. Ann Intern Med 2007; 146: Richard N, Juntilla M, Abraha A, et al. High prevalence of antiretroviral resistance in treated Ugandans infected with non-subtype B human immunodeficiency virus type 1. AIDS Res Hum Retroviruses 2004;20: Phillips AN, Pillay D, Garnett G, et al. Effect on transmission of HIV-1 resistance of timing of implementation of viral load monitoring to determine switches from first to second-line antiretroviral regimens in resource-limited settings. AIDS 2011; 25: Rewari BB, Bachani D, Rajasekaran S, Deshpande A, Chan PL, Srikantiah P. Evaluating patients for second-line antiretroviral therapy in India: the role of targeted viral load testing. J Acquir Immune Defic Syndr 2010 October 1 (Epub ahead of print). 96. van Oosterhout JJ, Brown L, Weigel R, et al. Diagnosis of antiretroviral therapy failure in Malawi: poor performance of clinical and immunological WHO criteria. Trop Med Int Health 2009;14: Xu HT, Martinez-Cajas JL, Ntemgwa ML, et al. Effects of the K65R and K65R/ M184V reverse transcriptase mutations in subtype C HIV on enzyme function and drug resistance. Retrovirology 2009;6: Hosseinipour MC, van Oosterhout JJ, Weigel R, et al. The public health approach to identify antiretroviral therapy failure: high-level nucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitor resistance among Malawians failing first-line antiretroviral therapy. AIDS 2009;23: Pillay V, Pillay C, Kantor R, Venter F, Levin L, Morris L. HIV type 1 subtype C drug resistance among pediatric and adult South African patients failing antiretroviral therapy. AIDS Res Hum Retroviruses 2008;24: von Wyl V, Yerly S, Böni J, et al. Factors associated with the emergence of K65R in patients with HIV-1 infection treated with combination antiretroviral therapy containing tenofovir. Clin Infect Dis 2008;46: Rey D, Hoen B, Chavanet P, et al. High rate of early virological failure with the once-daily tenofovir/lamivudine/nevirapine combination in naive HIV-1-infected patients. J Antimicrob Chemother 2009; 63: Clotet B. Once-daily dosing of nevirapine in HAART. J Antimicrob Chemother 2008;61: Miller MD, Margot N, McColl D, Cheng AK. K65R development among subtype C HIV-1-infected patients in tenofovir DF clinical trials. AIDS 2007;21: Ross L, Elion R, Lanier R, et al. Modulation of K65R selection by zidovudine inclusion: analysis of HIV resistance selection in subjects with virologic failure receiving once-daily abacavir/ lamivudine/zidovudine and tenofovir DF (study COL40263). AIDS Res Hum Retroviruses 2009;25: Copyright 2011 Massachusetts Medical Society. 646 n engl j med 365;7 nejm.org august 18, 2011

The preferential selection of K65R in HIV-1 subtype C is attenuated by nucleotide polymorphisms at thymidine analogue mutation sites

The preferential selection of K65R in HIV-1 subtype C is attenuated by nucleotide polymorphisms at thymidine analogue mutation sites Journal of Antimicrobial Chemotherapy Advance Access published June 7, 2013 J Antimicrob Chemother doi:10.1093/jac/dkt204 The preferential selection of K65R in HIV-1 subtype C is attenuated by nucleotide

More information

Introduction to HIV Drug Resistance. Kevin L. Ard, MD, MPH Massachusetts General Hospital Harvard Medical School

Introduction to HIV Drug Resistance. Kevin L. Ard, MD, MPH Massachusetts General Hospital Harvard Medical School Introduction to HIV Drug Resistance Kevin L. Ard, MD, MPH Massachusetts General Hospital Harvard Medical School Objectives 1. Describe the epidemiology of HIV drug resistance in sub-saharan Africa. 2.

More information

HIV-1 Subtypes: An Overview. Anna Maria Geretti Royal Free Hospital

HIV-1 Subtypes: An Overview. Anna Maria Geretti Royal Free Hospital HIV-1 Subtypes: An Overview Anna Maria Geretti Royal Free Hospital Group M Subtypes A (1, 2, 3) B C D F (1, 2) G H J K Mechanisms of HIV-1 genetic diversification Point mutations RT error rate: ~1 per

More information

Reverse transcriptase and protease inhibitor resistant mutations in art treatment naïve and treated hiv-1 infected children in India A Short Review

Reverse transcriptase and protease inhibitor resistant mutations in art treatment naïve and treated hiv-1 infected children in India A Short Review pissn 2349-2910 eissn 2395-0684 REVIEW Reverse transcriptase and protease inhibitor resistant mutations in art treatment naïve and treated hiv-1 infected children in India A Short Review Dinesh Bure, Department

More information

Antiviral Therapy 2011; 16: (doi: /IMP1851)

Antiviral Therapy 2011; 16: (doi: /IMP1851) Antiviral Therapy 2011; 16:925 929 (doi: 10.3851/IMP1851) Short communication Prevalence of low-level HIV-1 variants with reverse transcriptase mutation K65R and the effect of antiretroviral drug exposure

More information

PRINCIPLES and TRENDS in MANAGEMENT of HIV DISEASE: PROBLEMS OF DRUG RESISTANCE in VIRUSES of DIFFERENT SUBTYPES

PRINCIPLES and TRENDS in MANAGEMENT of HIV DISEASE: PROBLEMS OF DRUG RESISTANCE in VIRUSES of DIFFERENT SUBTYPES PRINCIPLES and TRENDS in MANAGEMENT of HIV DISEASE: PROBLEMS OF DRUG RESISTANCE in VIRUSES of DIFFERENT SUBTYPES Mark A. Wainberg McGill University AIDS Centre Jewish General Hospital Montreal, Quebec,

More information

Second-Line Therapy NORTHWEST AIDS EDUCATION AND TRAINING CENTER

Second-Line Therapy NORTHWEST AIDS EDUCATION AND TRAINING CENTER NORTHWEST AIDS EDUCATION AND TRAINING CENTER Second-Line Therapy David Spach, MD Clinical Director, Northwest AETC Professor of Medicine, Division of Infectious Diseases University of Washington Presentation

More information

2 nd Line Treatment and Resistance. Dr Rohit Talwani & Dr Dave Riedel 12 th June 2012

2 nd Line Treatment and Resistance. Dr Rohit Talwani & Dr Dave Riedel 12 th June 2012 2 nd Line Treatment and Resistance Dr Rohit Talwani & Dr Dave Riedel 12 th June 2012 Overview Basics of Resistance Treatment failure Strategies to manage treatment failure Mutation Definition: A change

More information

Review Article HIV-1 Genetic Variability and Clinical Implications

Review Article HIV-1 Genetic Variability and Clinical Implications ISRN Microbiology Volume 2013, Article ID 481314, 20 pages http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2013/481314 Review Article HIV-1 Genetic Variability and Clinical Implications Maria Mercedes Santoro 1 and Carlo Federico

More information

NNRTI Resistance NORTHWEST AIDS EDUCATION AND TRAINING CENTER

NNRTI Resistance NORTHWEST AIDS EDUCATION AND TRAINING CENTER NORTHWEST AIDS EDUCATION AND TRAINING CENTER NNRTI Resistance David H. Spach, MD Principal Investigator, NW AETC Professor of Medicine, Division of Infectious Diseases University of Washington Last Updated:

More information

The E138A substitution in HIV-1 reverse transcriptase decreases in vitro. susceptibility to emtricitabine as indicated by competitive fitness assays

The E138A substitution in HIV-1 reverse transcriptase decreases in vitro. susceptibility to emtricitabine as indicated by competitive fitness assays AAC Accepts, published online ahead of print on 13 January 2014 Antimicrob. Agents Chemother. doi:10.1128/aac.02114-13 Copyright 2014, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved. 1 2 The E138A

More information

HIV Drug Resistance: An Overview

HIV Drug Resistance: An Overview Human Journals Review Article October 2015 Vol.:1, Issue:1 All rights are reserved by Suraj Narayan Mali et al. HIV Drug Resistance: An Overview Keywords: HIV drug resistance mechanism, Antiretroviral

More information

Resistance Workshop. 3rd European HIV Drug

Resistance Workshop. 3rd European HIV Drug 3rd European HIV Drug Resistance Workshop March 30-April 1 st, 2005 Christine Hughes, PharmD Clinical Associate Professor Faculty of Pharmacy & Pharmaceutical Sciences University of Alberta Tenofovir resistance

More information

ORIGINAL ARTICLE /j x. Brescia, Italy

ORIGINAL ARTICLE /j x. Brescia, Italy ORIGINAL ARTICLE 10.1111/j.1469-0691.2004.00938.x Prevalence of drug resistance and newly recognised treatment-related substitutions in the HIV-1 reverse transcriptase and protease genes from HIV-positive

More information

Immune pressure analysis of protease and reverse transcriptase genes of primary HIV-1 subtype C isolates from South Africa

Immune pressure analysis of protease and reverse transcriptase genes of primary HIV-1 subtype C isolates from South Africa African Journal of Biotechnology Vol. 10(24), pp. 4784-4793, 6 June, 2011 Available online at http://www.academicjournals.org/ajb DOI: 10.5897/AJB10.560 ISSN 1684 5315 2011 Academic Journals Full Length

More information

HIV DRUG RESISTANCE IN AFRICA

HIV DRUG RESISTANCE IN AFRICA HIV DRUG RESISTANCE IN AFRICA Francis Ssali Joint Clinical Research Centre, Kampala Interest Meeting Mombasa May 10 th 2012 Scope 1. HIV-DR testing in Africa 2. The Epidemiology of HIV-DR in Africa 3.

More information

Title. HIV-1 Protease and Reverse Transcriptase Mutations: Correlations with Antiretroviral Therapy in

Title. HIV-1 Protease and Reverse Transcriptase Mutations: Correlations with Antiretroviral Therapy in Title HIV-1 Protease and Reverse Transcriptase Mutations: Correlations with Antiretroviral Therapy in Subtype B Isolates and Implications for Drug-Resistance Surveillance October 13, 2004 Authors SY Rhee

More information

Management of NRTI Resistance

Management of NRTI Resistance NORTHWEST AIDS EDUCATION AND TRAINING CENTER Management of NRTI Resistance David Spach, MD Principal Investigator, NW AETC Professor of Medicine, Division of Infectious Diseases University of Washington

More information

Case Study. Dr Sarah Sasson Immunopathology Registrar. HIV, Immunology and Infectious Diseases Department and SydPath, St Vincent's Hospital.

Case Study. Dr Sarah Sasson Immunopathology Registrar. HIV, Immunology and Infectious Diseases Department and SydPath, St Vincent's Hospital. Case Study Dr Sarah Sasson Immunopathology Registrar HIV, Immunology and Infectious Diseases Department and SydPath, St Vincent's Hospital Case 1: Case 1: 45F in Cameroon Cameroon HIV+ Presents with cutaneous

More information

It takes more than just a single target

It takes more than just a single target It takes more than just a single target As the challenges you face evolve... HIV mutates No HIV-1 mutation can be considered to be neutral 1 Growing evidence indicates all HIV subtypes may be prone to

More information

Role of Genetic Diversity amongst HIV-1 Non-B Subtypes in Drug Resistance: A Systematic Review of Virologic and Biochemical Evidence

Role of Genetic Diversity amongst HIV-1 Non-B Subtypes in Drug Resistance: A Systematic Review of Virologic and Biochemical Evidence AIDS Reviews. Rev. 2008;10:212-23 Role of Genetic Diversity amongst HIV-1 Non-B Subtypes in Drug Resistance: A Systematic Review of Virologic and Biochemical Evidence Jorge L. Martínez-Cajas 1, Nitika

More information

Evaluation and Management of Virologic Failure

Evaluation and Management of Virologic Failure National HIV Curriculum PDF created November 3, 2018, 12:26 am Evaluation and Management of Virologic Failure This is a PDF version of the following document: Section 1: Antiretroviral Therapy Topic 5:

More information

History (August 2010) Therapy for Experienced Patients. History (September 2010) History (November 2010) 12/2/11

History (August 2010) Therapy for Experienced Patients. History (September 2010) History (November 2010) 12/2/11 (August 2010) Therapy for Experienced Patients Hiroyu Hatano, MD, MHS Assistant Professor of Medicine University of California San Francisco Medical Management of AIDS December 2011 42M HIV (CD4=450, VL=6250,

More information

Somnuek Sungkanuparph, M.D.

Somnuek Sungkanuparph, M.D. HIV Drug Resistance Somnuek Sungkanuparph, M.D. Associate Professor Division of Infectious Diseases Department of Medicine Faculty of Medicine Ramathibodi Hospital Mahidol University Adjunct Professor

More information

Management of patients with antiretroviral treatment failure: guidelines comparison

Management of patients with antiretroviral treatment failure: guidelines comparison The editorial staff Management of patients with antiretroviral treatment failure: guidelines comparison A change of therapy should be considered for patients if they experience sustained rebound in viral

More information

Optimizing 2 nd and 3 rd Line Antiretroviral Therapy in Children and Adolescents

Optimizing 2 nd and 3 rd Line Antiretroviral Therapy in Children and Adolescents Optimizing 2 nd and 3 rd Line Antiretroviral Therapy in Children and Adolescents Victor Musiime, MBChB, MMED, PhD Senior Lecturer, Makerere University Investigator, Joint Clinical Research Centre (JCRC)

More information

Resistance to Integrase Strand Transfer Inhibitors

Resistance to Integrase Strand Transfer Inhibitors NORTHWEST AIDS EDUCATION AND TRAINING CENTER Resistance to Integrase Strand Transfer Inhibitors David Spach, MD Clinical Director, Northwest AETC Professor of Medicine, Division of Infectious Diseases

More information

Perspective Resistance and Replication Capacity Assays: Clinical Utility and Interpretation

Perspective Resistance and Replication Capacity Assays: Clinical Utility and Interpretation Perspective Resistance and Replication Capacity Assays: Clinical Utility and Interpretation Resistance testing has emerged as an important tool for antiretroviral management. Research continues to refine

More information

High Failure Rate of the ViroSeq HIV-1 Genotyping System for Drug Resistance Testing in Cameroon, a Country with Broad HIV-1 Genetic Diversity

High Failure Rate of the ViroSeq HIV-1 Genotyping System for Drug Resistance Testing in Cameroon, a Country with Broad HIV-1 Genetic Diversity JOURNAL OF CLINICAL MICROBIOLOGY, Apr. 2011, p. 1635 1641 Vol. 49, No. 4 0095-1137/11/$12.00 doi:10.1128/jcm.01478-10 Copyright 2011, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved. High Failure

More information

Pediatric Antiretroviral Resistance Challenges

Pediatric Antiretroviral Resistance Challenges Pediatric Antiretroviral Resistance Challenges Thanyawee Puthanakit, MD The HIVNAT, Thai Red Cross AIDS research Center The Research Institute for Health Science, Chiang Mai University Outline The burden

More information

Principles of HIV Drug Resistance: Resistance to New Drug Classes. Mark A Wainberg McGill University AIDS Centre Montreal, Quebec, Canada

Principles of HIV Drug Resistance: Resistance to New Drug Classes. Mark A Wainberg McGill University AIDS Centre Montreal, Quebec, Canada Principles of HIV Drug Resistance: Resistance to New Drug Classes Mark A Wainberg McGill University AIDS Centre Montreal, Quebec, Canada Why Is It Important to Understand HIV Drug Resistance? 1. Resistance

More information

Dr Carole Wallis, PhD Medical Director, BARC-SA Head of the Specialty Molecular Division, Lancet Laboratories, South Africa

Dr Carole Wallis, PhD Medical Director, BARC-SA Head of the Specialty Molecular Division, Lancet Laboratories, South Africa Dr Carole Wallis, PhD Medical Director, BARC-SA Head of the Specialty Molecular Division, Lancet Laboratories, South Africa Transmitted drug resistance Resistance patterns in first-line failures in adults

More information

Evolving Realities of HIV Treatment in Resource-limited Settings

Evolving Realities of HIV Treatment in Resource-limited Settings Evolving Realities of HIV Treatment in Resource-limited Settings Papa Salif Sow MD, MSc Department of Infectious Diseases University of Dakar, Senegal Introduction: ARV access in RLS Scale-up of ART has

More information

Received 31 July 2009/Returned for modification 16 September 2009/Accepted 24 November 2009

Received 31 July 2009/Returned for modification 16 September 2009/Accepted 24 November 2009 ANTIMICROBIAL AGENTS AND CHEMOTHERAPY, Feb. 2010, p. 907 911 Vol. 54, No. 2 0066-4804/10/$12.00 doi:10.1128/aac.01080-09 Copyright 2010, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved. Development

More information

Consensus drug resistance mutations for epidemiological surveillance: basic principles and potential controversies

Consensus drug resistance mutations for epidemiological surveillance: basic principles and potential controversies Antiviral Therapy 13 Suppl 2:59 68 Consensus drug resistance mutations for epidemiological surveillance: basic principles and potential controversies Robert W Shafer 1 *, Soo-Yon Rhee 1 and Diane E Bennett

More information

10 : 4. Introduction. R Sajithkumar, Kottayam. Mutations to select agents: Evolution:

10 : 4. Introduction. R Sajithkumar, Kottayam. Mutations to select agents: Evolution: 10 : 4 HIV drug resistance and second line of ART Introduction The first response to the HIV epidemic identified as AIDS in 1981- was the feeling of helplessness. The cause of the illness was soon identified

More information

Antiretroviral Therapy During Pregnancy and Delivery: 2015 Update

Antiretroviral Therapy During Pregnancy and Delivery: 2015 Update Frontier AIDS Education and Training Center Antiretroviral Therapy During Pregnancy and Delivery: 2015 Update Brian R. Wood, MD Assistant Professor of Medicine, University of Washington Medical Director,

More information

Characteristics and outcomes of individuals enrolled for HIV care in a rural clinic in Coastal Kenya Hassan, A.S.

Characteristics and outcomes of individuals enrolled for HIV care in a rural clinic in Coastal Kenya Hassan, A.S. UvA-DARE (Digital Academic Repository) Characteristics and outcomes of individuals enrolled for HIV care in a rural clinic in Coastal Kenya Hassan, A.S. Link to publication Citation for published version

More information

ARV Mode of Action. Mode of Action. Mode of Action NRTI. Immunopaedia.org.za

ARV Mode of Action. Mode of Action. Mode of Action NRTI. Immunopaedia.org.za ARV Mode of Action Mode of Action Mode of Action - NRTI Mode of Action - NNRTI Mode of Action - Protease Inhibitors Mode of Action - Integrase inhibitor Mode of Action - Entry Inhibitors Mode of Action

More information

Nobel /03/28. HIV virus and infected CD4+ T cells

Nobel /03/28. HIV virus and infected CD4+ T cells Mechanism of HIV drug resistance. Rodrigo Brindeiro / Amilcar Tanuri Laboratório de Virologia Molecular UFRJ 2 -Asso ciate Research Scientist, Internatio nal Center fo r Aids Care and Treatment Programs-ICAP,

More information

The use of antiretroviral agents during pregnancy in Canada and compliance with North-American guidelines

The use of antiretroviral agents during pregnancy in Canada and compliance with North-American guidelines The use of antiretroviral agents during pregnancy in Canada and compliance with North-American guidelines I. Boucoiran, T. Lee, K. Tulloch, L. Sauve, L. Samson, J. Brophy, M. Boucher and D. Money For and

More information

PREVALENCE OF TRANSMITTED HIV DRUG

PREVALENCE OF TRANSMITTED HIV DRUG PREVALENCE OF TRANSMITTED HIV DRUG RESISTANCE SINCE THE AVAILABILITY OF HIGHLY ACTIVE ANTIRETROVIRAL THERAPY Jessica S Russell, Doris Chibo, Matthew B Kaye, Megan L Gooey, Louise A Carolan, Anastasia Papadakis,

More information

Does Resistance Still Matter? Daniel R. Kuritzkes, M.D. Division of Infectious Diseases Brigham and Women s Hospital Harvard Medical School

Does Resistance Still Matter? Daniel R. Kuritzkes, M.D. Division of Infectious Diseases Brigham and Women s Hospital Harvard Medical School Does Resistance Still Matter? Daniel R. Kuritzkes, M.D. Division of Infectious Diseases Brigham and Women s Hospital Harvard Medical School Disclosure The speaker serves as a consultant to, and has received

More information

The Danish HIV Cohort Study, Copenhagen University Hospital, Rigshospitalet, Copenhagen, Denmark 4

The Danish HIV Cohort Study, Copenhagen University Hospital, Rigshospitalet, Copenhagen, Denmark 4 Antiviral Therapy 2009 14: 995 1000 (doi: 10.3851/IMP1412) Original article The incidence rate of HIV type-1 drug resistance in patients on antiretroviral therapy: a nationwide population-based Danish

More information

HIV/AIDS CID 2003:37 (1 July) 113

HIV/AIDS CID 2003:37 (1 July) 113 MAJOR ARTICLE HIV/AIDS Antiretroviral Drug Resistance Testing in Adults Infected with Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1: 2003 Recommendations of an International AIDS Society USA Panel Martin S. Hirsch,

More information

Page 1. Outline. Outline. Building specialized knowledge: HIV. Biological interactions. Social aspects of the epidemic. Programmatic actions

Page 1. Outline. Outline. Building specialized knowledge: HIV. Biological interactions. Social aspects of the epidemic. Programmatic actions Harvard-Brazil Collaborative Public Health Field Course January 2014 Lecture # 8 Building specialized knowledge: HIV Aluisio Segurado Department of Infectious Diseases School of Medicine, University of

More information

Prevalence of Transmitted Drug Resistance Mutations among Naive HIV-infected patients ( ) in Northwest Spain

Prevalence of Transmitted Drug Resistance Mutations among Naive HIV-infected patients ( ) in Northwest Spain Prevalence of Transmitted Drug Resistance Mutations among Naive HIV-infected patients (2014-2016) in Northwest Spain Berta Pernas 1, Andrés Tabernilla 1, Marta Grandal 1, Angelina Cañizares 2, Sofía Ortún

More information

Anumber of clinical trials have demonstrated

Anumber of clinical trials have demonstrated IMPROVING THE UTILITY OF PHENOTYPE RESISTANCE ASSAYS: NEW CUT-POINTS AND INTERPRETATION * Richard Haubrich, MD ABSTRACT The interpretation of a phenotype assay is determined by the cut-point, which defines

More information

Resistance profile of the new nucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitor apricitabine

Resistance profile of the new nucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitor apricitabine Journal of Antimicrobial Chemotherapy Advance Access published December 9, 2009 J Antimicrob Chemother doi:10.1093/jac/dkp422 esistance profile of the new nucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitor apricitabine

More information

PAEDIATRIC HIV INFECTION. Dr Ashendri Pillay Paediatric Infectious Diseases Specialist

PAEDIATRIC HIV INFECTION. Dr Ashendri Pillay Paediatric Infectious Diseases Specialist PAEDIATRIC HIV INFECTION Dr Ashendri Pillay Paediatric Infectious Diseases Specialist Paediatric HIV Infection Epidemiology Immuno-pathogenesis Antiretroviral therapy Transmission Diagnostics Clinical

More information

TB Intensive Tyler, Texas December 2-4, Tuberculosis and HIV Co-Infection. Lisa Y. Armitige, MD, PhD. December 4, 2008.

TB Intensive Tyler, Texas December 2-4, Tuberculosis and HIV Co-Infection. Lisa Y. Armitige, MD, PhD. December 4, 2008. TB Intensive Tyler, Texas December 2-4, 2008 Tuberculosis and HIV Co-Infection Lisa Y. Armitige, MD, Ph.D. December 4, 2008 Tuberculosis and HIV Co Infection Lisa Y. Armitige, MD, PhD Assistant Professor

More information

HIV Treatment Update. Awewura Kwara, MD, MPH&TM Associate Professor of Medicine and Infectious Diseases Brown University

HIV Treatment Update. Awewura Kwara, MD, MPH&TM Associate Professor of Medicine and Infectious Diseases Brown University HIV Treatment Update Awewura Kwara, MD, MPH&TM Associate Professor of Medicine and Infectious Diseases Brown University Outline Rationale for highly active antiretroviral therapy (HAART) When to start

More information

Simplifying HIV Treatment Now and in the Future

Simplifying HIV Treatment Now and in the Future Simplifying HIV Treatment Now and in the Future David M. Hachey, Pharm.D., AAHIVP Professor Idaho State University Department of Family Medicine Nothing Disclosure 1 Objectives List current first line

More information

0.14 ( 0.053%) UNAIDS 10% (94) ( ) (73-94/6 ) 8,920

0.14 ( 0.053%) UNAIDS 10% (94) ( ) (73-94/6 ) 8,920 0.14 UNAIDS 0.053% 2 250 60 10% 94 73 20 73-94/6 8,920 12 43 Public Health Service Task Force Recommendations 5-10% for Use of Antiretroviral Drugs in 10-20% Pregnant HIV-1-Infected Women for Maternal

More information

Antiretroviral drug resistance surveillance among drug-naive HIV-1-infected individuals in Gauteng Province, South Africa in 2002 and 2004

Antiretroviral drug resistance surveillance among drug-naive HIV-1-infected individuals in Gauteng Province, South Africa in 2002 and 2004 Antiviral Therapy 13 Suppl 2:101 107 Antiretroviral drug resistance surveillance among drug-naive HIV-1-infected individuals in Gauteng Province, South Africa in 2002 and 2004 Visva Pillay 1, Johanna Ledwaba

More information

HIV Drug Resistance among Adolescents and Young Adults Failing HIV Therapy in Zimbabwe

HIV Drug Resistance among Adolescents and Young Adults Failing HIV Therapy in Zimbabwe HIV Drug Resistance among Adolescents and Young Adults Failing HIV Therapy in Zimbabwe V Kouamou 1, J Manasa 1, D Katzenstein 1, A McGregor 1, CE Ndhlovu 1 & AT Makadzange 1. 1 University of Zimbabwe Introduction

More information

PHARMACOKINETICS OF ANTIRETROVIRAL AND ANTI-HCV AGENTS

PHARMACOKINETICS OF ANTIRETROVIRAL AND ANTI-HCV AGENTS 8. PHARMACOKINETICS OF ANTIRETROVIRAL AND ANTI-HCV AGENTS David Burger José Moltó Table 8.1a: INFLUENCE OF FOOD ON ABSORPTION (AREA UNDER THE CURVE) OF ANTIRETROVIRAL AGENTS NUCLEOSIDE ANALOGUES NtRTI

More information

Update on HIV-1 Drug Resistance and Tropism Testing

Update on HIV-1 Drug Resistance and Tropism Testing Update on HIV-1 Drug Resistance and Tropism Testing Daniel R. Kuritzkes, MD Section of Retroviral Therapeutics Brigham and Women s Hospital Harvard Medical School ACTHIV 2011: A State-of-the-Science Conference

More information

HIV 101: Fundamentals of HIV Infection

HIV 101: Fundamentals of HIV Infection HIV 101: Fundamentals of HIV Infection David H. Spach, MD Professor of Medicine University of Washington Seattle, Washington Learning Objectives After attending this presentation, learners will be able

More information

The new epidemic of drug resistant HIV-1

The new epidemic of drug resistant HIV-1 The new epidemic of drug resistant HIV-1 Gillian Hunt Centre for HIV and STI National Institute for Communicable Diseases ICREID March 2018 Status of the global HIV epidemic (2016) WHO Global Summary on

More information

Because accurate and reproducible phenotypic susceptibility

Because accurate and reproducible phenotypic susceptibility BRIEF REPORT: CLINICAL SCIENCE Comparison of the Precision and Sensitivity of the Antivirogram and PhenoSense HIV Drug Susceptibility Assays Jie Zhang, MS,* Soo-Yon Rhee, MS,* Jonathan Taylor, PhD, and

More information

Clinical skills building - HIV drug resistance

Clinical skills building - HIV drug resistance Clinical skills building - HIV drug resistance Richard Lessells Clinical case 44-year old HIV-positive male HIV diagnosis 2010 Pre-treatment CD4+ count not known Initiated first-line ART (TDF/FTC/EFV)

More information

Round table discussion Patients with multiresistant virus : A limited number, but a remarkable deal Introduction

Round table discussion Patients with multiresistant virus : A limited number, but a remarkable deal Introduction Disclosure statement: Dr. Santoro reports personal fees from ViiV Healthcare, Gilead and JANSSEN Cilag Round table discussion Patients with multiresistant virus : A limited number, but a remarkable deal

More information

Abstract #8 15th EU Meeting on HIV & Hepatitis (7-9 June 2017)

Abstract #8 15th EU Meeting on HIV & Hepatitis (7-9 June 2017) Epidemiological study of Doravirine associated resistance mutations in HIV-1- infected treatment-naïve patients from two large databases in France and Italy Anne-Genevieve Marcelin, Maria Mercedes Santoro,

More information

Improving accessibility to antiretroviral drugs: A south-south collaboration

Improving accessibility to antiretroviral drugs: A south-south collaboration Improving accessibility to antiretroviral drugs: A south-south collaboration Jaideep A Gogtay MD Cipla Ltd Mumbai jgogtay@cipla.com Adults and children estimated to be living with HIV at the end of 2000

More information

Continuing Education for Pharmacy Technicians

Continuing Education for Pharmacy Technicians Continuing Education for Pharmacy Technicians HIV/AIDS TREATMENT Michael Denaburg, Pharm.D. Birmingham, AL Objectives: 1. Identify drugs and drug classes currently used in the management of HIV infected

More information

Micropathology Ltd. University of Warwick Science Park, Venture Centre, Sir William Lyons Road, Coventry CV4 7EZ

Micropathology Ltd. University of Warwick Science Park, Venture Centre, Sir William Lyons Road, Coventry CV4 7EZ www.micropathology.com info@micropathology.com Micropathology Ltd Tel 24hrs: +44 (0) 24-76 323222 Fax / Ans: +44 (0) 24-76 - 323333 University of Warwick Science Park, Venture Centre, Sir William Lyons

More information

HIV-1 DRUG RESISTANCE MUTATIONS IN CHILDREN WHO FAILED NON-NUCLEOSIDE REVERSE TRANSCRIPTASE INHIBITOR-BASED ANTIRETROVIRAL THERAPY

HIV-1 DRUG RESISTANCE MUTATIONS IN CHILDREN WHO FAILED NON-NUCLEOSIDE REVERSE TRANSCRIPTASE INHIBITOR-BASED ANTIRETROVIRAL THERAPY HIV-1 DRUG RESISTANCE MUTATIONS IN CHILDREN HIV-1 DRUG RESISTANCE MUTATIONS IN CHILDREN WHO FAILED NON-NUCLEOSIDE REVERSE TRANSCRIPTASE INHIBITOR-BASED ANTIRETROVIRAL THERAPY Somnuek Sungkanuparph 1, Nopporn

More information

Principles of Antiretroviral Therapy

Principles of Antiretroviral Therapy Principles of Antiretroviral Therapy Ten Principles of Antiretroviral Therapy Skills Building Workshop: Clinical Management of HIV Infection and Antiretroviral Therapy, 11 th ICAAP, November 21st, 2011,

More information

Drug-resistant HIV-1 in sub-saharan Africa: clinical and public health studies Hamers, R.L.

Drug-resistant HIV-1 in sub-saharan Africa: clinical and public health studies Hamers, R.L. UvA-DARE (Digital Academic Repository) Drug-resistant HIV-1 in sub-saharan Africa: clinical and public health studies Hamers, R.L. Link to publication Citation for published version (APA): Hamers, R. L.

More information

Replicative Fitness Costs of Nonnucleoside Reverse Transcriptase Inhibitor Drug Resistance Mutations on HIV Subtype C

Replicative Fitness Costs of Nonnucleoside Reverse Transcriptase Inhibitor Drug Resistance Mutations on HIV Subtype C Replicative Fitness Costs of Nonnucleoside Reverse Transcriptase Inhibitor Drug Resistance Mutations on HIV Subtype C The Harvard community has made this article openly available. Please share how this

More information

Guidelines for the Use of Antiretroviral Agents in HIV-1-Infected Adults and Adolescents

Guidelines for the Use of Antiretroviral Agents in HIV-1-Infected Adults and Adolescents Guidelines for the Use of Antiretroviral Agents in HIV-1-Infected Adults and Adolescents Visit the AIDSinfo website to access the most up-to-date guideline. Register for e-mail notification of guideline

More information

HIV in the Brain MANAGING COMORBIDITIES IN PATIENTS WITH HIV

HIV in the Brain MANAGING COMORBIDITIES IN PATIENTS WITH HIV HIV in the Brain MANAGING COMORBIDITIES IN PATIENTS WITH HIV Shibani S. Mukerji MD, PhD Massachusetts General Hospital, Division of Immunologic, Inflammatory and Infectious Neurological Diseases Dana-Farber

More information

Paediatric HIV Drug Resistance 26th-International-Workshop-on-HIV-Drug-Resistance-programme [2].tiff

Paediatric HIV Drug Resistance 26th-International-Workshop-on-HIV-Drug-Resistance-programme [2].tiff Paediatric HIV Drug Resistance 26th-International-Workshop-on-HIV-Drug-Resistance-programme- 20171031[2].tiff Mo Archary King Edward VIII Hospital / UKZN Paediatric Infectious Diseases Unit Overview State

More information

This graph displays the natural history of the HIV disease. During acute infection there is high levels of HIV RNA in plasma, and CD4 s counts

This graph displays the natural history of the HIV disease. During acute infection there is high levels of HIV RNA in plasma, and CD4 s counts 1 2 This graph displays the natural history of the HIV disease. During acute infection there is high levels of HIV RNA in plasma, and CD4 s counts decreased. This period of acute infection or serocnversion

More information

Antiviral Therapy 2014; 19: (doi: /IMP2748)

Antiviral Therapy 2014; 19: (doi: /IMP2748) Antiviral Therapy 214; 19:435 441 (doi: 1.3851/IMP2748) Short communication A decade of HIV-1 drug resistance in the United States: trends and characteristics in a large protease/reverse transcriptase

More information

Whole genome deep sequencing of HIV reveals extensive multi-class drug resistance in Nigerian patients failing first-line antiretroviral therapy

Whole genome deep sequencing of HIV reveals extensive multi-class drug resistance in Nigerian patients failing first-line antiretroviral therapy Whole genome deep sequencing of HIV reveals extensive multi-class drug resistance in Nigerian patients failing first-line antiretroviral therapy K El Bouzidi 1,, RP Datir 1, V Kwaghe 3, S Roy 1, D Frampton

More information

Clinical Implications of Mutations at Reverse Transcriptase Codon 135 on Response to NNRTI-Based Therapy

Clinical Implications of Mutations at Reverse Transcriptase Codon 135 on Response to NNRTI-Based Therapy 8 The Open Virology Journal, 2007, 1, 8-13 Clinical Implications of Mutations at Reverse Transcriptase Codon 135 on Response to NNRTI-Based Therapy Harout K. Tossonian 1, Jesse D. Raffa 2, Jason Grebely

More information

TB/HIV Co-Infection. Tuberculosis and HIV

TB/HIV Co-Infection. Tuberculosis and HIV TB Intensive Tyler, Texas June 2-4, 2010 TB/HIV Co-Infection Lisa Y Armitige, MD, PhD June 3, 2010 Tuberculosis and HIV Co-Infection Lisa Y Armitige, MD, PhD Medical Consultant Heartland National TB Center

More information

Transmission Fitness of Drug- Resistant HIV Revealed in the United States National Surveillance System

Transmission Fitness of Drug- Resistant HIV Revealed in the United States National Surveillance System Transmission Fitness of Drug- Resistant HIV Revealed in the United States National Surveillance System Joel O. Wertheim 1,2, Alexandra M. Oster 3, Jeffrey A. Johnson 3, William M. Switzer 3, Neeraja Saduvala

More information

Elimination of mother to child transmission of HIV: is the end really in sight? Lisa L. Abuogi, MD University of Colorado, Denver Dec 3, 2014

Elimination of mother to child transmission of HIV: is the end really in sight? Lisa L. Abuogi, MD University of Colorado, Denver Dec 3, 2014 Elimination of mother to child transmission of HIV: is the end really in sight? Lisa L. Abuogi, MD University of Colorado, Denver Dec 3, 2014 Outline Background History of prevention of mother to child

More information

HIV Clinical Management: Antiretroviral Therapy and Drug Resistance

HIV Clinical Management: Antiretroviral Therapy and Drug Resistance HIV Clinical Management: Antiretroviral Therapy and Drug Resistance Judith S. Currier, MD, MSc Professor of Medicine University of California, Los Angeles Disclosures: Research Grant from Theratechnologies

More information

POST-EXPOSURE PROPHYLAXIS, PRE-EXPOSURE PROPHYLAXIS, & TREATMENT OF HIV

POST-EXPOSURE PROPHYLAXIS, PRE-EXPOSURE PROPHYLAXIS, & TREATMENT OF HIV POST-EXPOSURE PROPHYLAXIS, PRE-EXPOSURE PROPHYLAXIS, & TREATMENT OF HIV DISCLOSURE Relevant relationships with commercial entities none Potential for conflicts of interest within this presentation none

More information

HIV-2 Therapy. Ricardo Jorge Camacho KU Leuven, Rega Institute for Medical Research, Leuven, Belgium

HIV-2 Therapy. Ricardo Jorge Camacho KU Leuven, Rega Institute for Medical Research, Leuven, Belgium HIV-2 Therapy Ricardo Jorge Camacho KU Leuven, Rega Institute for Medical Research, Leuven, Belgium World distribution ~1.000.000 2.000.000 people infected in West Africa Highest prevalence : Guinea-Bissau

More information

Genotypic Resistance in HIV-infected Patients Failing a d4t/3tc/nvp Regimen

Genotypic Resistance in HIV-infected Patients Failing a d4t/3tc/nvp Regimen Original Article Genotypic Resistance in HIV-infected Patients Failing a d4t/3tc/nvp Regimen Somnuek Sungkanuparph, M.D.* Weerawat Manosuthi, M.D.* Sasisopin Kiertiburanakul, M.D.* Wasun chantratita, Ph.D.**

More information

HIV Drug Resistance South Africa, How to address the increasing need? 14 Apr. 2016

HIV Drug Resistance South Africa, How to address the increasing need? 14 Apr. 2016 HIV Drug Resistance South Africa, How to address the increasing need? 14 Apr. 2016 1 Thus the HIV DR needs to focus on prevention and then diagnostic capacity to 1 st provide VL monitoring for early &

More information

Special Contribution Questions to and Answers from the International AIDS Society USA Resistance Testing Guidelines Panel

Special Contribution Questions to and Answers from the International AIDS Society USA Resistance Testing Guidelines Panel Special Contribution Questions to and Answers from the International AIDS Society USA Resistance Testing Guidelines Panel In 1996 the International AIDS Society USA convened an international panel of experts

More information

Phase II clinical trial TEmAA. Didier Koumavi EKOUEVI, MD PhD (Principal Investigator)

Phase II clinical trial TEmAA. Didier Koumavi EKOUEVI, MD PhD (Principal Investigator) The combination of Tenofovir-Emtricitabine (Truvada ): a new antiretroviral (ARV) regimen for the prevention of mother-to-child transmission of HIV-1 (PMTCT) in resource-limited settings Phase II clinical

More information

Virological failure to Protease inhibitors in Monotherapy is linked to the presence of signature mutations in Gag without changes in HIV-1 replication

Virological failure to Protease inhibitors in Monotherapy is linked to the presence of signature mutations in Gag without changes in HIV-1 replication Virological failure to Protease inhibitors in Monotherapy is linked to the presence of signature mutations in Gag without changes in HIV-1 replication Oscar Blanch-Lombarte Rome, 7-9 June, 2017 European

More information

Supplementary Methods. HIV Synthesis Transmission V1. Model details

Supplementary Methods. HIV Synthesis Transmission V1. Model details Effect on transmission of HIV-1 resistance of timing of implementation of viral load monitoring to determine switches from first to second line antiretroviral regimens in resource-limited settings. Supplementary

More information

To test the possible source of the HBV infection outside the study family, we searched the Genbank

To test the possible source of the HBV infection outside the study family, we searched the Genbank Supplementary Discussion The source of hepatitis B virus infection To test the possible source of the HBV infection outside the study family, we searched the Genbank and HBV Database (http://hbvdb.ibcp.fr),

More information

ART and Prevention: What do we know?

ART and Prevention: What do we know? ART and Prevention: What do we know? Biomedical Issues Trip Gulick, MD, MPH Chief, Division of Infectious Diseases Professor of Medicine Weill Cornell Medical College New York City ART for Prevention:

More information

REVERSE TRANSCRIPTASE INHIBITORS DRUG RESISTANCE MUTATIONS IN DRUG-NAIVE HIV TYPE 1 POSITIVE KENYANS

REVERSE TRANSCRIPTASE INHIBITORS DRUG RESISTANCE MUTATIONS IN DRUG-NAIVE HIV TYPE 1 POSITIVE KENYANS 4 Ea s t Af r i c a n Me d i c a l Jo u r n a l January 2011 East African Medical Journal Vol. 88 No. 1 January 2011 REVERSE TRANSCRIPTASE INHIBITORS DRUG RESISTANCE MUTATIONS IN DRUG-NAIVE HIV TYPE 1

More information

The frequency of HIV-I drug resistance mutations among treatment-naïve individuals at a tertiary care centre in south India

The frequency of HIV-I drug resistance mutations among treatment-naïve individuals at a tertiary care centre in south India ORIGINAL RESEARCH ARTICLE The frequency of HIV-I drug resistance mutations among treatment-naïve individuals at a tertiary care centre in south India A J Kandathil MSc*, R Kannangai MD PhD*, O C Abraham

More information

MDR HIV and Total Therapeutic Failure. Douglas G. Fish, MD Albany Medical College Albany, New York Cali, Colombia March 30, 2007

MDR HIV and Total Therapeutic Failure. Douglas G. Fish, MD Albany Medical College Albany, New York Cali, Colombia March 30, 2007 MDR HIV and Total Therapeutic Failure Douglas G. Fish, MD Albany Medical College Albany, New York Cali, Colombia March 30, 2007 Objectives Case study Definitions Fitness Pathogenesis of resistant virus

More information

Types of HIV Resistance. How to count HIV primary resistance? List of protease mutations important for Surveillance

Types of HIV Resistance. How to count HIV primary resistance? List of protease mutations important for Surveillance Mechanism of HIV drug resistance II. 1 - Head of Laboratório de Virologia Molecular UFRJ 2 -Associate Research Scientist, International Center for Aids Care and Treatment Programs-ICAP, Mailman School

More information

Prevalence of etravirine mutations and impact on response to treatment in routine clinical care: the Swiss HIV Cohort Study (SHCS)

Prevalence of etravirine mutations and impact on response to treatment in routine clinical care: the Swiss HIV Cohort Study (SHCS) DOI: 10.1111/j.1468-1293.2009.00756.x r 2009 British HIV Association HIV Medicine (2009), 10, 647 656 ORIGINAL RESEARCH Prevalence of etravirine mutations and impact on response to treatment in routine

More information

Case # 1. Case #1 (cont d)

Case # 1. Case #1 (cont d) Antiretroviral Therapy Management: Expert Panel Discussion George Beatty Susa Coffey Steve O Brien December 3, 2011 Moderated by Annie Luetkemeyer Case # 1 38 y.o. man, CD4 =350, VL=340K, new to your clinic

More information

Differentiating emtricitabine (FTC) from lamivudine (3TC): what a fine-tuning of antiretroviral therapy might entail

Differentiating emtricitabine (FTC) from lamivudine (3TC): what a fine-tuning of antiretroviral therapy might entail HAART, HIV correlated pathologies and other infections Renato Maserati Differentiating emtricitabine (FTC) from lamivudine (3TC): what a fine-tuning of antiretroviral therapy might entail Corresponding

More information

Clinical Management of HIV Drug Resistance

Clinical Management of HIV Drug Resistance Viruses 2011, 3, 347-378; doi:10.3390/v3040347 OPEN ACCESS viruses ISSN 1999-4915 www.mdpi.com/journal/viruses Review Clinical Management of HIV Drug Resistance Karoll J. Cortez and Frank Maldarelli *

More information