60 results on '"JC Schmit"'
Search Results
2. 1,1,3-Trioxo-2 H ,4 H -Thieno[3,4- e ][1,2,4]Thiadiazine (TTD) Derivatives: a New Class of Nonnucleoside Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1 (HIV-1) Reverse Transcriptase Inhibitors with Anti-HIV-1 Activity
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Christophe Pannecouque, Anne-Mieke Vandamme, Salvador Vega, J. A. Diaz, R. Declercq, Robert Esnouf, Jan Desmyter, Jan Balzarini, S. T. Ingate, Myriam Witvrouw, JC Schmit, Heidi Jonckheere, M. E. Arranz, L. Van Meervelt, and E. De Clercq
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Pharmacology ,Nevirapine ,biology ,Biological activity ,Simian immunodeficiency virus ,biology.organism_classification ,medicine.disease_cause ,Virology ,Reverse transcriptase ,Virus ,Zidovudine ,Infectious Diseases ,Lentivirus ,medicine ,Pharmacology (medical) ,Didanosine ,medicine.drug - Abstract
We report the development of a new group of nonnucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitors (NNRTIs). One of the most active congeners of this series of 1,1,3-trioxo-2 H ,4 H -thieno[3,4- e ][1,2,4]thiadiazine (TTD) derivatives, i.e., 2-(3-fluorobenzyl)-4-cyanomethylen-1,1,3-trioxo-2 H ,4 H -thieno[3,4- e ][1,2,4]thiadiazine) (QM96639) was found to inhibit human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) type 1 [HIV-1 (III B )] replication in MT-4 cells at a concentration of 0.09 μM. This compound was toxic for the host cells only at a 1,400-fold higher concentration. The TTD derivatives proved effective against a variety of HIV-1 strains, including those that are resistant to 3′-azido-3′-deoxythymidine (AZT), but not against HIV-2 (ROD) or simian immunodeficiency virus (SIV/MAC251). HIV-1 strains containing the L100I, K103N, V106A, E138K, Y181C, or Y188H mutations in their reverse transcriptase (RT) displayed reduced sensitivity to the compounds. Their cross-resistance patterns correlated with that of nevirapine. 2-Benzyl-4-cyanomethylen-1,1,3-trioxo-2 H ,4 H -thieno[3,4- e ][1,2,4]thiadiazine (QM96521) enhanced the anti-HIV-1 activity of AZT and didanosine in a subsynergistic manner. HIV-1-resistant virus containing the V179D mutation in the RT was selected after approximately six passages of HIV-1 (III B ) in CEM cells in the presence of different concentrations of QM96521. From structure-activity relationship analysis of a wide variety of TTD derivatives, a number of restrictions appeared as to the chemical modifications that were compatible with anti-HIV activity. Modelling studies suggest that in contrast to most other NNRTIs, but akin to nevirapine, QM96521 does not act as a hydrogen bond donor in the RT-drug complex.
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- 1998
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3. Etravirine in protease inhibitor-free antiretroviral combination therapies
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Maurizio Zazzi, Anders Sönnerborg, Alejandro Pironti, Thomas Lengauer, E Schuelter, Rolf Kaiser, Ricardo Jorge Camacho, Björn-Erik Ole Jensen, JC Schmit, B Clotet, Nadine Luebke, and Francesca Incardona
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Reverse-transcriptase inhibitor ,business.industry ,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health ,Human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) ,Etravirine ,Pharmacology ,medicine.disease_cause ,Infectious Diseases ,Male patient ,International congress ,medicine ,Protease inhibitor (pharmacology) ,business ,Viral load ,Darunavir ,medicine.drug - Abstract
Etravirine (ETR) is a next generation non-nucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitor (NNRTI). The studies for ETR EMA approval were almost exclusively performed together with the protease inhibitor (PI) darunavir. However the fact that ETR can be active against NNRTI-pretreated HIV variants and that it is well tolerated suggests its application in PI-free antiretroviral combination therapies. Although approved only for PI-containing therapies, a number of ETR treatments without PIs are performed currently. To evaluate the performance of ETR in PI-free regimens, we analyzed the EURESIST database. We observed a total of 70 therapy switches to a PI-free, ETR containing antiretroviral combination with detectable baseline viral load. 50/70 switches were in male patients and 20/70 in females. The median of previous treatments was 10. The following combinations were detected in the EURESIST database: ETR+MVC+RAL (20.0%); ETR+FTC+TDF (18.6%); 3TC+ETR+RAL (7.1%); 3TC+ABC+ETR (5.7%); other combinations (31.4%). A switch was defined as successful when either ≤50 copies/mL or a decline of the viral load of 2 log 10 , both at week 24 (range 18-30) were achieved. The overall success rate (SR) was 77% (54/70), and for the different combinations: ETR+MVC+RAL =78.6% (11/14); ETR+FTC+TDF =92.3% (12/13); 3TC+ETR+RAL =80.0% (4/5), 3TC+ABC+ETR =100% (SR 4/4); and for other combinations =67.6% (23/34). These SR values are comparable to those for other therapy combinations in such pretreated patients. (Published: 11 November 2012) Citation: Abstracts of the Eleventh International Congress on Drug Therapy in HIV Infection Schuelter E et al. Journal of the International AIDS Society 2012, 15 (Suppl 4):18260 http://www.jiasociety.org/index.php/jias/article/view/18260 | http://dx.doi.org/10.7448/IAS.15.6.18260
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- 2012
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4. HIV-1 drug-resistance patterns among patients on failing treatment in a large number of European countries
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Da, Vijver, Am, Wensing, Åsjö B, Bruckova M, Lb, Jorgensen, Camacho R, Horban A, Linka M, Lazanas M, Loveday C, MacRae E, Nielsen C, Paraskevis D, Poljak M, Puchhammer-Stöckl E, Ruiz L, Jc, Schmit, Stanczak G, Stanojevic M, Anne-Mieke Vandamme, Vercauteren J, Zazzi M, Bacheler L, Lecocq P, Villacian J, Ca, Boucher, and Virology
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Adult ,Male ,Genotype ,HIV Infections ,HIV Protease Inhibitors ,Middle Aged ,HIV Reverse Transcriptase ,Europe ,Amino Acid Substitution ,HIV Protease ,SDG 3 - Good Health and Well-being ,Sequence Analysis, Protein ,Drug Resistance, Viral ,Mutation ,HIV-1 ,Humans ,Female ,Treatment Failure - Abstract
Background : Information about patterns of HIV-1 drug resistance among treatment-exposed patients is crucial for the development of novel effective drugs. Currently no system exists that monitors patterns of resistance in patients failing therapy. Methods : The study included 1,988 HIV-1 sequences from patients experiencing therapy failure collected between 2000 and 2004 in 15 European countries. Genotypic resistance was interpreted using the ANRS algorithm. Phenotypic resistance was predicted using the Virco geno- to phenotype system. Results : 80.7% of the sequences included at least one drug-resistance mutation. Mutations were found for NRTIs (73.5%), NNRTIs (48.5%), and protease inhibitors (35.8%). Ninety percent of sequences with genotypic resistance harbored M184V, M41L, K103N, D67N, and/or T215Y. Among NRTIs, resistance was most frequently predicted for lamivudine. About half of all sequences had reduced susceptibility for NNRTIs. Resistance to most boosted protease inhibitors was found in < 25%. No sequence had resistance to all currently available drugs. Conclusion : Levels of resistance among patients with therapy failure were high. The patterns of resistance reflect resistance to drugs available for a longer time. Fully suppressive regimens can be designed even for the most mutated HIV because boosted protease inhibitors have remained active against most circulating viruses and new drug classes have become available.
5. An individualized functional magnetic resonance imaging protocol to assess semantic congruency effects on episodic memory in an aging multilingual population.
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Perquin M, Viswanathan S, Vaillant M, Risius O, Huiart L, Schmit JC, Diederich NJ, Fink GR, and Kukolja J
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The cognitive stimulation induced by multilingualism may slow down age-related memory impairment. However, a suitable neuroscientific framework to assess the influence of multilingualism on age-related memory processes is missing. We propose an experimental paradigm that assesses the effects of semantic congruency on episodic memory using functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI). To this end, we modified the picture-word interference (PWI) task to be suitable for the assessment of older multilingual subjects undergoing fMRI. In particular, stimulus materials were prepared in multiple languages (French, German, Luxembourgish, English) and closely matched in semantic properties, thus enabling participants to perform the experiment in a language of their choice. This paradigm was validated in a group ( n = 62) of healthy, older participants (over 64 years) who were multilingual, all practicing three or more languages. Consistent with the engagement of semantic congruency processes, we found that the encoding and recognition of semantically related vs. unrelated picture-word pairs evoked robust differences in behavior and the neural activity of parietal-temporal networks. These effects were negligibly modulated by the language used to perform the task. Based on this validation in a multilingual population, we conclude that the proposed paradigm will allow future studies to evaluate whether multilingualism aptitude engages neural systems in a manner that protects long-term memory from aging-related decline., Competing Interests: The authors declare that the research was conducted in the absence of any commercial or financial relationships that could be construed as a potential conflict of interest., (Copyright © 2022 Perquin, Viswanathan, Vaillant, Risius, Huiart, Schmit, Diederich, Fink and Kukolja.)
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- 2022
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6. Active Components from Cassia abbreviata Prevent HIV-1 Entry by Distinct Mechanisms of Action.
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Zheng Y, Yang XW, Schols D, Mori M, Botta B, Chevigné A, Mulinge M, Steinmetz A, Schmit JC, and Seguin-Devaux C
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- Catechin pharmacology, HIV Envelope Protein gp120 genetics, HIV Infections genetics, HIV Infections virology, HIV-1 drug effects, HIV-1 pathogenicity, Humans, Oleanolic Acid pharmacology, Palmitic Acid pharmacology, Plant Extracts chemistry, Plant Roots drug effects, Plant Roots genetics, Plant Roots virology, Quercetin analogs & derivatives, Quercetin pharmacology, Stilbenes pharmacology, Cassia chemistry, HIV Infections drug therapy, Plant Extracts pharmacology, Virus Internalization drug effects
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Cassia abbreviata is widely used in Sub-Saharan Africa for treating many diseases, including HIV-1 infection. We have recently described the chemical structures of 28 compounds isolated from an alcoholic crude extract of barks and roots of C. abbreviata , and showed that six bioactive compounds inhibit HIV-1 infection. In the present study, we demonstrate that the six compounds block HIV-1 entry into cells: oleanolic acid, palmitic acid, taxifolin, piceatannol, guibourtinidol-(4α→8)-epiafzelechin, and a novel compound named as cassiabrevone. We report, for the first time, that guibourtinidol-(4α→8)-epiafzelechin and cassiabrevone inhibit HIV-1 entry (IC
50 of 42.47 µM and 30.96 µM, respectively), as well as that piceatannol interacts with cellular membranes. Piceatannol inhibits HIV-1 infection in a dual-chamber assay mimicking the female genital tract, as well as HSV infection, emphasizing its potential as a microbicide. Structure-activity relationships (SAR) showed that pharmacophoric groups of piceatannol are strictly required to inhibit HIV-1 entry. By a ligand-based in silico study, we speculated that piceatannol and norartocarpetin may have a very similar mechanism of action and efficacy because of the highly comparable pharmacophoric and 3D space, while guibourtinidol-(4α→8)-epiafzelechin and cassiabrevone may display a different mechanism. We finally show that cassiabrevone plays a major role of the crude extract of CA by blocking the binding activity of HIV-1 gp120 and CD4.- Published
- 2021
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7. Chemical Constituents of Cassia abbreviata and Their Anti-HIV-1 Activity.
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Yang X, He Z, Zheng Y, Wang N, Mulinge M, Schmit JC, Steinmetz A, and Seguin-Devaux C
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- Flavonoids chemistry, Flavonoids pharmacology, Magnetic Resonance Spectroscopy, Molecular Structure, Cassia chemistry, HIV-1 drug effects, Plant Extracts chemistry, Plant Extracts pharmacology
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Three new ( 1 - 3 ) and 25 known compounds were isolated from the crude extract of Cassia abbreviata . The chemical structures of new compounds were established by extensive spectroscopic analyses including 1D and 2D NMR and HRESIMS. Cassiabrevone ( 1 ) is the first heterodimer of guibourtinidol and planchol A. Compound 2 was a new chalcane, while 3 was a new naphthalene. Cassiabrevone ( 1 ), guibourtinidol-(4α→8)-epiafzelechin ( 4 ), taxifolin ( 8 ), oleanolic acid ( 17 ), piceatannol ( 22 ), and palmitic acid ( 28 ), exhibited potent anti-HIV-1 activity with IC
50 values of 11.89 µM, 15.39 µM, 49.04 µM, 7.95 µM, 3.58 µM, and 15.97 µM, respectively.- Published
- 2021
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8. Predominance of the heterozygous CCR5 delta-24 deletion in African individuals resistant to HIV infection might be related to a defect in CCR5 addressing at the cell surface.
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Arendt V, Amand M, Iserentant G, Lemaire M, Masquelier C, Ndayisaba GF, Verhofstede C, Karita E, Allen S, Chevigné A, Schmit JC, Bercoff DP, and Seguin-Devaux C
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- Alleles, Cell Membrane genetics, Cell Membrane metabolism, Cohort Studies, Disease Resistance, Female, Guinea, HIV Infections immunology, HIV Infections metabolism, HIV-1 physiology, Heterozygote, Humans, Infant, Kenya, Leukocytes, Mononuclear immunology, Leukocytes, Mononuclear virology, Male, Mutation, Receptors, CCR5 metabolism, Rwanda, Sequence Deletion, HIV Infections genetics, Receptors, CCR5 genetics, Receptors, CCR5 immunology
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Introduction: The chemokine receptor CCR5 is the main co-receptor for R5-tropic HIV-1 variants. We have previously described a novel 24-base pair deletion in the coding region of CCR5 among individuals from Rwanda. Here, we investigated the prevalence of hCCR5Δ24 in different cohorts and its impact on CCR5 expression and HIV-1 infection in vitro., Methods: We screened hCCR5Δ24 in a total of 3232 individuals which were either HIV-1 uninfected, high-risk HIV-1 seronegative and seropositive partners from serodiscordant couples, Long-Term Survivors, or HIV-1 infected volunteers from Africa (Rwanda, Kenya, Guinea-Conakry) and Luxembourg, using a real-time PCR assay. The role of the 24-base pair deletion on CCR5 expression and HIV infection was assessed in cell lines and PBMC using mRNA quantification, confocal analysis, flow and imaging cytometry., Results and Discussion: Among the 1661 patients from Rwanda, 12 individuals were heterozygous for hCCR5Δ24 but none were homozygous. Although heterozygosity for this allele may not confer complete resistance to HIV-1 infection, the prevalence of the mutation was 2.41% (95%CI: 0.43; 8.37) in 83 Long-Term Survivors (LTS) and 0.99% (95%CI: 0.45; 2.14) in 613 HIV-1 exposed seronegative members as compared with 0.35% (95% Cl: 0.06; 1.25) in 579 HIV-1 seropositive members. The prevalence of hCCR5Δ24 was 0.55% (95%CI: 0.15; 1.69) in 547 infants from Kenya but the mutation was not detected in 224 infants from Guinea-Conakry nor in 800 Caucasian individuals from Luxembourg. Expression of hCCR5Δ24 in cell lines and PBMC showed that the hCCR5Δ24 protein is stably expressed but is not transported to the plasma membrane due to a conformational change. Instead, the mutant receptor was retained intracellularly, colocalized with an endoplasmic reticulum marker and did not mediate HIV-1 infection. Co-transfection of hCCR5Δ24 and wtCCR5 did not indicate a transdominant negative effect of CCR5Δ24 on wtCCR5., Conclusions: Our findings indicate that hCCR5Δ24 is not expressed at the cell surface. This could explain the higher prevalence of the heterozygous hCCR5Δ24 in LTS and HIV-1 exposed seronegative members from serodiscordant couples. Our data suggest an East-African localization of this deletion, which needs to be confirmed in larger cohorts from African and non-African countries., (© 2019 The Authors. Journal of the International AIDS Society published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd on behalf of the International AIDS Society.)
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- 2019
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9. Challenges and benefits of integrating diverse sampling strategies in the observation of cardiovascular risk factors (ORISCAV-LUX 2) study.
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Alkerwi A, Pastore J, Sauvageot N, Coroller GL, Bocquet V, d'Incau M, Aguayo G, Appenzeller B, Bejko D, Bohn T, Malisoux L, Couffignal S, Noppe S, Delagardelle C, Beissel J, Chioti A, Stranges S, and Schmit JC
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- Adult, Cardiovascular Diseases diagnosis, Cross-Sectional Studies, Female, Humans, Luxembourg epidemiology, Male, Middle Aged, Prevalence, Risk Factors, Cardiovascular Diseases epidemiology, Health Surveys statistics & numerical data, Patient Participation statistics & numerical data, Patient Selection
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Background: It is challenging to manage data collection as planned and creation of opportunities to adapt during the course of enrolment may be needed. This paper aims to summarize the different sampling strategies adopted in the second wave of Observation of Cardiovascular Risk Factors (ORISCAV-LUX, 2016-17), with a focus on population coverage and sample representativeness., Methods: Data from the first nationwide cross-sectional, population-based ORISCAV-LUX survey, 2007-08 and from the newly complementary sample recruited via different pathways, nine years later were analysed. First, we compare the socio-demographic characteristics and health profiles between baseline participants and non-participants to the second wave. Then, we describe the distribution of subjects across different strategy-specific samples and performed a comparison of the overall ORISCAV-LUX2 sample to the national population according to stratification criteria., Results: For the baseline sample (1209 subjects), the participants (660) were younger than the non-participants (549), with a significant difference in average ages (44 vs 45.8 years; P = 0.019). There was a significant difference in terms of education level (P < 0.0001), 218 (33%) participants having university qualification vs. 95 (18%) non-participants. The participants seemed having better health perception (p < 0.0001); 455 (70.3%) self-reported good or very good health perception compared to 312 (58.2%) non-participants. The prevalence of obesity (P < 0.0001), hypertension (P < 0.0001), diabetes (P = 0.007), and mean values of related biomarkers were significantly higher among the non-participants. The overall sample (1558 participants) was mainly composed of randomly selected subjects, including 660 from the baseline sample and 455 from other health examination survey sample and 269 from civil registry sample (constituting in total 88.8%), against only 174 volunteers (11.2%), with significantly different characteristics and health status. The ORISCAV-LUX2 sample was representative of national population for geographical district, but not for sex and age; the younger (25-34 years) and older (65-79 years) being underrepresented, whereas middle-aged adults being over-represented, with significant sex-specific difference (p < 0.0001)., Conclusion: This study represents a careful first-stage analysis of the ORISCAV-LUX2 sample, based on available information on participants and non-participants. The ORISCAV-LUX datasets represents a relevant tool for epidemiological research and a basis for health monitoring and evidence-based prevention of cardiometabolic risk in Luxembourg.
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- 2019
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10. The Envelope Cytoplasmic Tail of HIV-1 Subtype C Contributes to Poor Replication Capacity through Low Viral Infectivity and Cell-to-Cell Transmission.
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Santos da Silva E, Mulinge M, Lemaire M, Masquelier C, Beraud C, Rybicki A, Servais JY, Iserentant G, Schmit JC, Seguin-Devaux C, and Perez Bercoff D
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- CD4-Positive T-Lymphocytes virology, Cell Line, HIV Envelope Protein gp41 genetics, HIV Infections genetics, HIV Infections virology, HIV-1 pathogenicity, Humans, Virion genetics, Virus Internalization, HIV Infections transmission, HIV-1 genetics, Virus Replication genetics, env Gene Products, Human Immunodeficiency Virus genetics
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The cytoplasmic tail (gp41CT) of the HIV-1 envelope (Env) mediates Env incorporation into virions and regulates Env intracellular trafficking. Little is known about the functional impact of variability in this domain. To address this issue, we compared the replication of recombinant virus pairs carrying the full Env (Env viruses) or the Env ectodomain fused to the gp41CT of NL4.3 (EnvEC viruses) (12 subtype C and 10 subtype B pairs) in primary CD4+ T-cells and monocyte-derived-macrophages (MDMs). In CD4+ T-cells, replication was as follows: B-EnvEC = B-Env>C-EnvEC>C-Env, indicating that the gp41CT of subtype C contributes to the low replicative capacity of this subtype. In MDMs, in contrast, replication capacity was comparable for all viruses regardless of subtype and of gp41CT. In CD4+ T-cells, viral entry, viral release and viral gene expression were similar. However, infectivity of free virions and cell-to-cell transmission of C-Env viruses released by CD4+ T-cells was lower, suggestive of lower Env incorporation into virions. Subtype C matrix only minimally rescued viral replication and failed to restore infectivity of free viruses and cell-to-cell transmission. Taken together, these results show that polymorphisms in the gp41CT contribute to viral replication capacity and suggest that the number of Env spikes per virion may vary across subtypes. These findings should be taken into consideration in the design of vaccines., Competing Interests: The authors have declared that no competing interests exist.
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- 2016
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11. Hypertension burden in Luxembourg: Individual risk factors and geographic variations, 2013 to 2015 European Health Examination Survey.
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Ruiz-Castell M, Kandala NB, Kuemmerle A, Schritz A, Barré J, Delagardelle C, Krippler S, Schmit JC, and Stranges S
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- Adult, Alcohol Drinking epidemiology, Cross-Sectional Studies, Depression epidemiology, Exercise, Female, Health Status, Health Surveys, Humans, Hypertension drug therapy, Luxembourg epidemiology, Male, Middle Aged, Prevalence, Protective Factors, Risk Factors, Health Knowledge, Attitudes, Practice, Hypertension epidemiology
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Hypertension is a modifiable risk factor for cardiovascular disease, but it remains the main cause of death in Luxembourg. We aimed to estimate the current prevalence of hypertension, associated risk factors, and its geographic variation in Luxembourg.Cross-sectional, population-based data on 1497 randomly selected Luxembourg residents aged 25 to 64 years were collected as part of the European Health Examination Survey from 2013 to 2015. Hypertension was defined as systolic/diastolic blood pressure ≥140/90 mm Hg, self-report of a physician diagnosis or on antihypertensive medication. Standard and Bayesian regressions were used to examine associations between hypertension and covariates, and also geographic distribution of hypertension across the country.Nearly 31% of Luxembourg residents were hypertensive, and over 70% of those were either unaware of their condition or not adequately controlled. The likelihood of hypertension was lower in men more physically active (odds ratio [95% credible region] 0.6 [0.4, 0.9]) and consuming alcohol daily (0.3 [0.1, 0.8]), and higher in men with a poor health perception (1.6 [1.0, 2.7]) and in women experiencing depressive symptoms (1.8 [1.3, 2.7]). There were geographic variations in hypertension prevalence across cantons and municipalities. The highest odds ratio was observed in the most industrialized region (South-West) (1.2 [0.9, 1.6]) with a positive effect at 90% credible region.In Luxembourg, the vast majority of people with hypertension are either unaware of their condition or not adequately controlled, which constitutes a major, neglected public health challenge. There are geographic variations in hypertension prevalence in Luxembourg, hence the role of individual and regional risk factors along with public health initiatives to reduce disease burden should be considered., Competing Interests: The authors report no conflicts of interest.
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- 2016
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12. COMET: adaptive context-based modeling for ultrafast HIV-1 subtype identification.
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Struck D, Lawyer G, Ternes AM, Schmit JC, and Bercoff DP
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- HIV-1 classification, HIV-1 isolation & purification, Humans, Phylogeny, Software, Algorithms, HIV-1 genetics, High-Throughput Nucleotide Sequencing methods
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Viral sequence classification has wide applications in clinical, epidemiological, structural and functional categorization studies. Most existing approaches rely on an initial alignment step followed by classification based on phylogenetic or statistical algorithms. Here we present an ultrafast alignment-free subtyping tool for human immunodeficiency virus type one (HIV-1) adapted from Prediction by Partial Matching compression. This tool, named COMET, was compared to the widely used phylogeny-based REGA and SCUEAL tools using synthetic and clinical HIV data sets (1,090,698 and 10,625 sequences, respectively). COMET's sensitivity and specificity were comparable to or higher than the two other subtyping tools on both data sets for known subtypes. COMET also excelled in detecting and identifying new recombinant forms, a frequent feature of the HIV epidemic. Runtime comparisons showed that COMET was almost as fast as USEARCH. This study demonstrates the advantages of alignment-free classification of viral sequences, which feature high rates of variation, recombination and insertions/deletions. COMET is free to use via an online interface., (© The Author(s) 2014. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of Nucleic Acids Research.)
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- 2014
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13. Increase in transmitted resistance to non-nucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitors among newly diagnosed HIV-1 infections in Europe.
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Frentz D, Van de Vijver DA, Abecasis AB, Albert J, Hamouda O, Jørgensen LB, Kücherer C, Struck D, Schmit JC, Vercauteren J, Åsjö B, Balotta C, Beshkov D, Camacho RJ, Clotet B, Coughlan S, Griskevicius A, Grossman Z, Horban A, Kolupajeva T, Korn K, Kostrikis LG, Liitsola K, Linka M, Nielsen C, Otelea D, Paraskevis D, Paredes R, Poljak M, Puchhammer-Stöckl E, Sönnerborg A, Stanekova D, Stanojevic M, Van Wijngaerden E, Wensing AM, and Boucher CA
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- Adult, Europe epidemiology, Female, Genotype, HIV Infections epidemiology, HIV Infections transmission, HIV-1 classification, HIV-1 drug effects, HIV-1 isolation & purification, Humans, Male, Mutation, Phylogeny, Prevalence, Anti-HIV Agents therapeutic use, Drug Resistance, Viral, HIV Infections drug therapy, HIV Infections virology, HIV-1 genetics
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Background: One out of ten newly diagnosed patients in Europe was infected with a virus carrying a drug resistant mutation. We analysed the patterns over time for transmitted drug resistance mutations (TDRM) using data from the European Spread program., Methods: Clinical, epidemiological and virological data from 4317 patients newly diagnosed with HIV-1 infection between 2002 and 2007 were analysed. Patients were enrolled using a pre-defined sampling strategy., Results: The overall prevalence of TDRM in this period was 8.9% (95% CI: 8.1-9.8). Interestingly, significant changes over time in TDRM caused by the different drug classes were found. Whereas nucleoside resistance mutations remained constant at 5%, a significant decline in protease inhibitors resistance mutations was observed, from 3.9% in 2002 to 1.6% in 2007 (p = 0.001). In contrast, resistance to non-nucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitors (NNRTIs) doubled from 2.0% in 2002 to 4.1% in 2007 (p = 0.004) with 58% of viral strains carrying a K103N mutation. Phylogenetic analysis showed that these temporal changes could not be explained by large clusters of TDRM., Conclusion: During the years 2002 to 2007 transmitted resistance to NNRTI has doubled to 4% in Europe. The frequent use of NNRTI in first-line regimens and the clinical impact of NNRTI mutations warrants continued monitoring.
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- 2014
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14. Patterns of transmitted HIV drug resistance in Europe vary by risk group.
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Frentz D, van de Vijver D, Abecasis A, Albert J, Hamouda O, Jørgensen L, Kücherer C, Struck D, Schmit JC, Vercauteren J, Asjö B, Balotta C, Bergin C, Beshkov D, Camacho R, Clotet B, Griskevicius A, Grossman Z, Horban A, Kolupajeva T, Korn K, Kostrikis L, Linka KL, Nielsen C, Otelea D, Paraskevis D, Paredes R, Poljak M, Puchhammer-Stöckl E, Sönnerborg A, Stanekova D, Stanojevic M, Vandamme AM, Boucher C, and Wensing A
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- Adult, Europe epidemiology, Female, HIV Infections drug therapy, HIV Infections epidemiology, HIV Infections virology, Heterosexuality statistics & numerical data, Homosexuality, Male statistics & numerical data, Humans, Logistic Models, Male, Middle Aged, Protease Inhibitors therapeutic use, Reverse Transcriptase Inhibitors therapeutic use, Risk, Sexual Behavior statistics & numerical data, Substance Abuse, Intravenous epidemiology, Anti-HIV Agents therapeutic use, Drug Resistance, Viral, HIV Infections transmission, HIV-1 drug effects, Risk-Taking, Substance Abuse, Intravenous virology
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Background: In Europe, a continuous programme (SPREAD) has been in place for ten years to study transmission of drug resistant HIV. We analysed time trends of transmitted drug resistance mutations (TDRM) in relation to the risk behaviour reported., Methods: HIV-1 patients newly diagnosed in 27 countries from 2002 through 2007 were included. Inclusion was representative for risk group and geographical distribution in the participating countries in Europe. Trends over time were calculated by logistic regression., Results: From the 4317 patients included, the majority was men-having-sex-with-men -MSM (2084, 48%), followed by heterosexuals (1501, 35%) and injection drug users (IDU) (355, 8%). MSM were more often from Western Europe origin, infected with subtype B virus, and recently infected (<1 year) (p<0.001). The prevalence of TDRM was highest in MSM (prevalence of 11.1%), followed by heterosexuals (6.6%) and IDU (5.1%, p<0.001). TDRM was predominantly ascribed to nucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitors (NRTI) with a prevalence of 6.6% in MSM, 3.3% in heterosexuals and 2.0% in IDU (p = 0.001). A significant increase in resistance to non- nucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitors (NNRTIs) and a decrease in resistance to protease inhibitors was observed in MSM (p = 0.008 and p = 0.006, respectively), but not in heterosexual patients (p = 0.68 and p = 0.14, respectively)., Conclusions: MSM showed to have significantly higher TDRM prevalence compared to heterosexuals and IDU. The increasing NNRTI resistance in MSM is likely to negatively influence the therapy response of first-line therapy, as most include NNRTI drugs.
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- 2014
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15. Creation of a federated database of blood proteins: a powerful new tool for finding and characterizing biomarkers in serum.
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Marshall J, Bowden P, Schmit JC, and Betsou F
- Abstract
Protein biomarkers offer major benefits for diagnosis and monitoring of disease processes. Recent advances in protein mass spectrometry make it feasible to use this very sensitive technology to detect and quantify proteins in blood. To explore the potential of blood biomarkers, we conducted a thorough review to evaluate the reliability of data in the literature and to determine the spectrum of proteins reported to exist in blood with a goal of creating a Federated Database of Blood Proteins (FDBP). A unique feature of our approach is the use of a SQL database for all of the peptide data; the power of the SQL database combined with standard informatic algorithms such as BLAST and the statistical analysis system (SAS) allowed the rapid annotation and analysis of the database without the need to create special programs to manage the data. Our mathematical analysis and review shows that in addition to the usual secreted proteins found in blood, there are many reports of intracellular proteins and good agreement on transcription factors, DNA remodelling factors in addition to cellular receptors and their signal transduction enzymes. Overall, we have catalogued about 12,130 proteins identified by at least one unique peptide, and of these 3858 have 3 or more peptide correlations. The FDBP with annotations should facilitate testing blood for specific disease biomarkers.
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- 2014
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16. HIV-1 tropism determination using a phenotypic Env recombinant viral assay highlights overestimation of CXCR4-usage by genotypic prediction algorithms for CRF01_AE and CRF02_AG [corrected].
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Mulinge M, Lemaire M, Servais JY, Rybicki A, Struck D, da Silva ES, Verhofstede C, Lie Y, Seguin-Devaux C, Schmit JC, and Bercoff DP
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- Algorithms, Cyclohexanes pharmacology, Genotype, Humans, Luciferases, Maraviroc, Phenotype, Triazoles pharmacology, HIV Envelope Protein gp120 metabolism, HIV-1 physiology, Receptors, CXCR4 metabolism, Viral Tropism physiology, Virus Internalization drug effects
- Abstract
Background: Human Immunodeficiency virus type-1 (HIV) entry into target cells involves binding of the viral envelope (Env) to CD4 and a coreceptor, mainly CCR5 or CXCR4. The only currently licensed HIV entry inhibitor, maraviroc, targets CCR5, and the presence of CXCX4-using strains must be excluded prior to treatment. Co-receptor usage can be assessed by phenotypic assays or through genotypic prediction. Here we compared the performance of a phenotypic Env-Recombinant Viral Assay (RVA) to the two most widely used genotypic prediction algorithms, Geno2Pheno[coreceptor] and webPSSM., Methods: Co-receptor tropism of samples from 73 subtype B and 219 non-B infections was measured phenotypically using a luciferase-tagged, NL4-3-based, RVA targeting Env. In parallel, tropism was inferred genotypically from the corresponding V3-loop sequences using Geno2Pheno[coreceptor] (5-20% FPR) and webPSSM-R5X4. For discordant samples, phenotypic outcome was retested using co-receptor antagonists or the validated Trofile® Enhanced-Sensitivity-Tropism-Assay., Results: The lower detection limit of the RVA was 2.5% and 5% for X4 and R5 minority variants respectively. A phenotype/genotype result was obtained for 210 samples. Overall, concordance of phenotypic results with Geno2Pheno[coreceptor] was 85.2% and concordance with webPSSM was 79.5%. For subtype B, concordance with Geno2pheno[coreceptor] was 94.4% and concordance with webPSSM was 79.6%. High concordance of genotypic tools with phenotypic outcome was seen for subtype C (90% for both tools). Main discordances involved CRF01_AE and CRF02_AG for both algorithms (CRF01_AE: 35.9% discordances with Geno2Pheno[coreceptor] and 28.2% with webPSSM; CRF02_AG: 20.7% for both algorithms). Genotypic prediction overestimated CXCR4-usage for both CRFs. For webPSSM, 40% discordance was observed for subtype A., Conclusions: Phenotypic assays remain the most accurate for most non-B subtypes and new subtype-specific rules should be developed for non-B subtypes, as research studies more and more draw conclusions from genotypically-inferred tropism, and to avoid unnecessarily precluding patients with limited treatment options from receiving maraviroc or other entry inhibitors.
- Published
- 2013
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17. Clinical evaluation of Rega 8: an updated genotypic interpretation system that significantly predicts HIV-therapy response.
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Vercauteren J, Beheydt G, Prosperi M, Libin P, Imbrechts S, Camacho R, Clotet B, De Luca A, Grossman Z, Kaiser R, Sönnerborg A, Torti C, Van Wijngaerden E, Schmit JC, Zazzi M, Geretti AM, Vandamme AM, and Van Laethem K
- Subjects
- Adult, Anti-HIV Agents pharmacology, Databases as Topic, Female, Genotype, HIV-1 drug effects, Humans, Male, ROC Curve, Sensitivity and Specificity, Treatment Outcome, Algorithms, Anti-HIV Agents therapeutic use, HIV Infections drug therapy, HIV Infections virology, HIV-1 genetics
- Abstract
Introduction: Clinically evaluating genotypic interpretation systems is essential to provide optimal guidance in designing potent individualized HIV-regimens. This study aimed at investigating the ability of the latest Rega algorithm to predict virological response on a short and longer period., Materials Methods: 9231 treatment changes episodes were extracted from an integrated patient database. The virological response after 8, 24 and 48 weeks was dichotomized to success and failure. Success was defined as a viral load below 50 copies/ml or alternatively, a 2 log decrease from the baseline viral load at 8 weeks. The predictive ability of Rega version 8 was analysed in comparison with that of previous evaluated version Rega 5 and two other algorithms (ANRS v2011.05 and Stanford HIVdb v6.0.11). A logistic model based on the genotypic susceptibility score was used to predict virological response, and additionally, confounding factors were added to the model. Performance of the models was compared using the area under the ROC curve (AUC) and a Wilcoxon signed-rank test., Results: Per unit increase of the GSS reported by Rega 8, the odds on having a successful therapy response on week 8 increased significantly by 81% (OR = 1.81, CI = [1.76-1.86]), on week 24 by 73% (OR = 1.73, CI = [1.69-1.78]) and on week 48 by 85% (OR = 1.85, CI = [1.80-1.91]). No significant differences in AUC were found between the performance of Rega 8 and Rega 5, ANRS v2011.05 and Stanford HIVdb v6.0.11, however Rega 8 had the highest sensitivity: 76.9%, 76.5% and 77.2% on 8, 24 and 48 weeks respectively. Inclusion of additional factors increased the performance significantly., Conclusion: Rega 8 is a significant predictor for virological response with a better sensitivity than previously, and with rules for recently approved drugs. Additional variables should be taken into account to ensure an effective regimen.
- Published
- 2013
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18. Limited cross-border infections in patients newly diagnosed with HIV in Europe.
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Frentz D, Wensing AM, Albert J, Paraskevis D, Abecasis AB, Hamouda O, Jørgensen LB, Kücherer C, Struck D, Schmit JC, Åsjö B, Balotta C, Beshkov D, Camacho RJ, Clotet B, Coughlan S, De Wit S, Griskevicius A, Grossman Z, Horban A, Kolupajeva T, Korn K, Kostrikis LG, Liitsola K, Linka M, Nielsen C, Otelea D, Paredes R, Poljak M, Puchhammer-Stöckl E, Sönnerborg A, Stanekova D, Stanojevic M, Vandamme AM, Boucher CA, and Van de Vijver DA
- Subjects
- Adult, Cluster Analysis, Europe epidemiology, HIV Infections transmission, HIV-1 isolation & purification, Humans, Male, Molecular Epidemiology, Molecular Sequence Data, Phylogeny, Sequence Analysis, DNA, Travel, HIV Infections epidemiology, HIV Infections virology, HIV-1 classification, HIV-1 genetics, RNA, Viral genetics
- Abstract
Background: International travel plays a role in the spread of HIV-1 across Europe. It is, however, not known whether international travel is more important for spread of the epidemic as compared to endogenous infections within single countries. In this study, phylogenetic associations among HIV of newly diagnosed patients were determined across Europe., Results: Data came from the SPREAD programme which collects samples of newly diagnosed patients that are representative for national HIV epidemics. 4260 pol sequences from 25 European countries and Israel collected in 2002-2007 were included.We identified 457 clusters including 1330 persons (31.2% of all patients). The cluster size ranged between 2 and 28. A number of 987 patients (74.2%) were part of a cluster that consisted only of patients originating from the same country. In addition, 135 patients (10.2%) were in a cluster including only individuals from neighboring countries. Finally, 208 patients (15.6%) clustered with individuals from countries without a common border. Clustering with patients from the same country was less prevalent in patients being infected with B subtype (P-value <0.0001), in men who have sex with men (P-value <0.0001), and in recently infected patients (P-value =0.045)., Conclusions: Our findings indicate that the transmission of HIV-1 in Europe is predominantly occurring between patients from the same country. This could have implications for HIV-1 transmission prevention programmes. Because infections through travelling between countries is not frequently observed it is important to have good surveillance of the national HIV-1 epidemics.
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- 2013
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19. HIV-1 subtype distribution and its demographic determinants in newly diagnosed patients in Europe suggest highly compartmentalized epidemics.
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Abecasis AB, Wensing AM, Paraskevis D, Vercauteren J, Theys K, Van de Vijver DA, Albert J, Asjö B, Balotta C, Beshkov D, Camacho RJ, Clotet B, De Gascun C, Griskevicius A, Grossman Z, Hamouda O, Horban A, Kolupajeva T, Korn K, Kostrikis LG, Kücherer C, Liitsola K, Linka M, Nielsen C, Otelea D, Paredes R, Poljak M, Puchhammer-Stöckl E, Schmit JC, Sönnerborg A, Stanekova D, Stanojevic M, Struck D, Boucher CA, and Vandamme AM
- Subjects
- Bayes Theorem, Europe epidemiology, Female, HIV Infections virology, HIV-1 classification, Humans, Male, Risk Factors, Risk-Taking, Social Behavior, Socioeconomic Factors, Epidemics, HIV Infections epidemiology, HIV-1 genetics
- Abstract
Background: Understanding HIV-1 subtype distribution and epidemiology can assist preventive measures and clinical decisions. Sequence variation may affect antiviral drug resistance development, disease progression, evolutionary rates and transmission routes., Results: We investigated the subtype distribution of HIV-1 in Europe and Israel in a representative sample of patients diagnosed between 2002 and 2005 and related it to the demographic data available. 2793 PRO-RT sequences were subtyped either with the REGA Subtyping tool or by a manual procedure that included phylogenetic tree and recombination analysis. The most prevalent subtypes/CRFs in our dataset were subtype B (66.1%), followed by sub-subtype A1 (6.9%), subtype C (6.8%) and CRF02_AG (4.7%). Substantial differences in the proportion of new diagnoses with distinct subtypes were found between European countries: the lowest proportion of subtype B was found in Israel (27.9%) and Portugal (39.2%), while the highest was observed in Poland (96.2%) and Slovenia (93.6%). Other subtypes were significantly more diagnosed in immigrant populations. Subtype B was significantly more diagnosed in men than in women and in MSM > IDUs > heterosexuals. Furthermore, the subtype distribution according to continent of origin of the patients suggests they acquired their infection there or in Europe from compatriots., Conclusions: The association of subtype with demographic parameters suggests highly compartmentalized epidemics, determined by social and behavioural characteristics of the patients.
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- 2013
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20. Treatment-associated polymorphisms in protease are significantly associated with higher viral load and lower CD4 count in newly diagnosed drug-naive HIV-1 infected patients.
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Theys K, Deforche K, Vercauteren J, Libin P, van de Vijver DA, Albert J, Asjö B, Balotta C, Bruckova M, Camacho RJ, Clotet B, Coughlan S, Grossman Z, Hamouda O, Horban A, Korn K, Kostrikis LG, Kücherer C, Nielsen C, Paraskevis D, Poljak M, Puchhammer-Stockl E, Riva C, Ruiz L, Liitsola K, Schmit JC, Schuurman R, Sönnerborg A, Stanekova D, Stanojevic M, Struck D, Van Laethem K, Wensing AM, Boucher CA, and Vandamme AM
- Subjects
- Adult, Drug Resistance, Viral, Female, HIV Infections immunology, HIV Infections virology, HIV-1 drug effects, HIV-1 genetics, HIV-1 physiology, Humans, Male, Peptide Hydrolases metabolism, Prospective Studies, Viral Proteins metabolism, Anti-HIV Agents therapeutic use, CD4 Lymphocyte Count, HIV Infections drug therapy, HIV-1 enzymology, Peptide Hydrolases genetics, Polymorphism, Genetic, Viral Load, Viral Proteins genetics
- Abstract
Background: The effect of drug resistance transmission on disease progression in the newly infected patient is not well understood. Major drug resistance mutations severely impair viral fitness in a drug free environment, and therefore are expected to revert quickly. Compensatory mutations, often already polymorphic in wild-type viruses, do not tend to revert after transmission. While compensatory mutations increase fitness during treatment, their presence may also modulate viral fitness and virulence in absence of therapy and major resistance mutations. We previously designed a modeling technique that quantifies genotypic footprints of in vivo treatment selective pressure, including both drug resistance mutations and polymorphic compensatory mutations, through the quantitative description of a fitness landscape from virus genetic sequences., Results: Genotypic correlates of viral load and CD4 cell count were evaluated in subtype B sequences from recently diagnosed treatment-naive patients enrolled in the SPREAD programme. The association of surveillance drug resistance mutations, reported compensatory mutations and fitness estimated from drug selective pressure fitness landscapes with baseline viral load and CD4 cell count was evaluated using regression techniques. Protease genotypic variability estimated to increase fitness during treatment was associated with higher viral load and lower CD4 cell counts also in treatment-naive patients, which could primarily be attributed to well-known compensatory mutations at highly polymorphic positions. By contrast, treatment-related mutations in reverse transcriptase could not explain viral load or CD4 cell count variability., Conclusions: These results suggest that polymorphic compensatory mutations in protease, reported to be selected during treatment, may improve the replicative capacity of HIV-1 even in absence of drug selective pressure or major resistance mutations. The presence of this polymorphic variation may either reflect a history of drug selective pressure, i.e. transmission from a treated patient, or merely be a result of diversity in wild-type virus. Our findings suggest that transmitted drug resistance has the potential to contribute to faster disease progression in the newly infected host and to shape the HIV-1 epidemic at a population level.
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- 2012
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21. Phages and HIV-1: from display to interplay.
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Delhalle S, Schmit JC, and Chevigné A
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- Antibodies, Monoclonal immunology, Antibodies, Neutralizing immunology, Antibodies, Viral immunology, Bacteriophages genetics, Binding Sites immunology, HIV Envelope Protein gp120 immunology, HIV Envelope Protein gp41 immunology, HIV-1 genetics, Peptide Library, Receptors, CCR5 immunology, Receptors, CXCR4 immunology, Acquired Immunodeficiency Syndrome immunology, Cell Surface Display Techniques methods, Epitope Mapping methods, Epitopes immunology, HIV-1 immunology
- Abstract
The complex hide-and-seek game between HIV-1 and the host immune system has impaired the development of an efficient vaccine. In addition, the high variability of the virus impedes the long-term control of viral replication by small antiviral drugs. For more than 20 years, phage display technology has been intensively used in the field of HIV-1 to explore the epitope landscape recognized by monoclonal and polyclonal HIV-1-specific antibodies, thereby providing precious data about immunodominant and neutralizing epitopes. In parallel, biopanning experiments with various combinatorial or antibody fragment libraries were conducted on viral targets as well as host receptors to identify HIV-1 inhibitors. Besides these applications, phage display technology has been applied to characterize the enzymatic specificity of the HIV-1 protease. Phage particles also represent valuable alternative carriers displaying various HIV-1 antigens to the immune system and eliciting antiviral responses. This review presents and summarizes the different studies conducted with regard to the nature of phage libraries, target display mode and biopanning procedures.
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- 2012
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22. Prevalence of hepatitis B and C and HIV infections among problem drug users in Luxembourg: self-report versus serological evidence.
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Origer A and Schmit JC
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- Adolescent, Adult, Confidence Intervals, Cross-Sectional Studies, Female, HIV Infections blood, Hepatitis B blood, Hepatitis C blood, Humans, Luxembourg epidemiology, Male, Middle Aged, Odds Ratio, Population Surveillance, Prevalence, Sensitivity and Specificity, Seroepidemiologic Studies, Serologic Tests, Substance-Related Disorders blood, Surveys and Questionnaires, Young Adult, HIV Infections epidemiology, Hepatitis B epidemiology, Hepatitis C epidemiology, Self Report, Substance-Related Disorders epidemiology
- Abstract
Background: To determine the seroprevalence of hepatitis B (HBV), hepatitis C (HCV) and HIV infections in problem drug users (PDU) in Luxembourg. To measure the validity of self-reported test results provided by study participants as well as obtained through the national drug-monitoring system (RELIS)., Methods: In a cross-sectional multisite study, data were collected by voluntary, anonymous and assisted questionnaires and serological detection of antibodies and antigens. Out of 1169 contacts, 397 participants were recruited within in and out-of-treatment settings (84.2% injecting drug users; IDU)., Results: The prevalence of antibodies to HIV was 8/272 (2.9%; 95% CI 0.9% to 4.9%), to HCV 245/343 (71.4%; 66.6% to 76.2%), and 67/310 (21.6%; 17.1% to 26.2%) to total HBV antibodies and surface antigen (for IDU 5/202, 218/268 and 59/239, respectively). Specificity of study self-reports was very high for HBV and perfect for HCV and HIV. Sensitivity was 0.224, 0.798 and 0.800, respectively. Kappa scores provided degrees of agreement between serological tests and study self-reports of 0.89 for HIV, 0.65 for HCV and 0.25 for HBV. In contrast to simultaneous cross-sectional self-reports, secondary self-reported data (RELIS) showed high agreement for HIV and HBV infections and provided a good proxy for estimation of HCV seroprevalence., Conclusion: HIV testing routines in PDU should be completed at least by HBV and HCV detection given the poor validity of cross-sectional self-reports on hepatitis infections. HIV and hepatitis prevalence estimations in PDU gain by relying on multisite/setting data collection. Research should further investigate the validity of HIV and hepatitis self-reports from routine drug-monitoring systems versus cross-sectional surveys.
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- 2012
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23. Selection of a CXCR4 antagonist from a human heavy chain CDR3-derived phage library.
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Chevigné A, Fischer A, Mathu J, Counson M, Beaupain N, Plesséria JM, Schmit JC, and Deroo S
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- Amino Acid Sequence, Complementarity Determining Regions chemistry, Gene Library, Humans, Immunoglobulin M chemistry, Peptide Library, Receptors, CXCR4 antagonists & inhibitors
- Abstract
Phage display technology is a powerful selection approach to identify strong and specific binders to a large variety of targets. In this study, we compared the efficacy of a phage library displaying human heavy chain complementarity determining region 3 (HCDR3) repertoires with a set of conventional random peptide libraries for the identification of CXCR4 antagonists using a peptide corresponding to the second extracellular loop of the receptor CXCR4 as target. A total of 11 selection campaigns on this target did not result in any specific ligand from the random peptide libraries. In contrast, a single selection campaign with an HCDR3 library derived from the IgM repertoire of a nonimmunized donor resulted in nine specific peptides with lengths ranging from 10 to 19 residues. Four of these HCDR3 sequences interacted with native receptor and the most frequently isolated peptide displayed an affinity of 5.6 μm and acted as a CXCR4 antagonist (IC(50) = 23 μm). To comprehend the basis of the highly efficient HCDR3 library selection, its biochemical properties were investigated. The HCDR3 length varied from 3 to 21 residues and displayed a biased amino acid content with a predominant proportion of Tyr, Gly, Ser and Asp. Repetitive and conserved motifs were observed in the majority of the HCDR3 sequences. The strength and efficacy of the HCDR3 libraries reside in the combination of multiple size peptides and a naturally biased sequence variation. Therefore, HCDR3 libraries represent a powerful and versatile alternative to fully randomized peptide libraries, in particular for difficult targets., (© 2011 CRP - Santé. Journal compilation © 2011 FEBS.)
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- 2011
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24. The HIV/AIDS epidemic in sub-Saharan Africa: thinking ahead on programmatic tasks and related operational research.
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Zachariah R, Van Damme W, Arendt V, Schmit JC, and Harries AD
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- Acquired Immunodeficiency Syndrome drug therapy, Acquired Immunodeficiency Syndrome economics, Acquired Immunodeficiency Syndrome epidemiology, Acquired Immunodeficiency Syndrome prevention & control, Africa South of the Sahara epidemiology, Anti-HIV Agents economics, Anti-HIV Agents therapeutic use, Communicable Disease Control, HIV Infections drug therapy, HIV Infections economics, HIV Infections prevention & control, Humans, National Health Programs, HIV Infections epidemiology, Operations Research
- Abstract
Until now, we have all been desperately trying to run behind the HIV/AIDS epidemic and catch up with it, but despite all our efforts, the epidemic remains well ahead of us. In 2010, the antiretroviral treatment (ART) gap was about 60%, AIDS-related deaths were almost two million a year, and on top of these figures, for every one person started on ART, there were two new HIV infections. What is needed to change this situation is to think ahead of the epidemic in terms of the programmatic tasks we will be faced with and try to act boldly in trying to implement those tasks. From a programmatic perspective, we: a) highlight what needs to fundamentally change in our thinking and overall approach to the epidemic; and b) outline a number of key task areas for implementation and related operational research.
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- 2011
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25. A hepatitis A, B, C and HIV prevalence and risk factor study in ever injecting and non-injecting drug users in Luxembourg associated with HAV and HBV immunisations.
- Author
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Removille N, Origer A, Couffignal S, Vaillant M, Schmit JC, and Lair ML
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Female, Health Surveys, Hepatitis B prevention & control, Hepatitis C prevention & control, Humans, Luxembourg, Male, Prevalence, Risk Factors, Risk Reduction Behavior, Seroepidemiologic Studies, Young Adult, HIV Infections epidemiology, HIV Infections etiology, Hepatitis A epidemiology, Hepatitis A etiology, Hepatitis A Vaccines therapeutic use, Hepatitis B epidemiology, Hepatitis B etiology, Hepatitis B Vaccines therapeutic use, Hepatitis C epidemiology, Hepatitis C etiology, Substance Abuse, Intravenous complications
- Abstract
Background: In Luxembourg, viral hepatitis and HIV infection data in problem drug users (PDUs) are primarily based on self-reporting. Our study aimed to determine the prevalence of HAV, HBV, HCV and HIV infections in ever injecting (IDUs) and non-injecting drug users (nIDUs) including inherent risk factors analysis for IDUs. Secondary objectives were immunisation against HAV and HBV, referral to care and treatment facilities as well as reduction in risk behaviour., Methods: A nationwide, cross-sectional multi-site survey, involving 5 in-, 8 out-treatment and 2 prison centres, included both an assisted questionnaire (n = 368) and serological detection of HIV and Hepatitis A, B, C (n = 334). A response rate of 31% resulted in the participation of 310 IDUs and 58 nIDUs. Risk factors such as drug use, sexual behaviour, imprisonment, protection and health knowledge (HAV, HBV status and immunisations, HCV, HIV), piercing/tattoo and use of social and medical services were studied by means of chi2 and logistic models., Results: Seroprevalence results for IDUs were 81.3% (218/268, 95%CI=[76.6; 86.0]) for HCV, 29.1% (74/254, 95%CI=[25.5;34.7 ]) for HBV (acute/chronic infection or past cured infection), 2.5% (5/202, 95%CI=[0.3; 4.6]) for HIV-1 and 57.1% (108/189, 95%CI=[50.0; 64.1]) for HAV (cured infections or past vaccinations). Seroprevalence results for nIDUs were 19.1% (9/47, 95%CI=[7.9;30.3]) for HCV, 8.9% (4/45, 95%CI=[0.6;17.2]) for HBV (acute/chronic infection or past cured infection), 4.8% (2/42, 95%CI=[-1.7;11.3]) for HIV-1 and 65.9% (27/41, 95%CI=[51.4;80.4]) for HAV. Prisoners showed the highest rates for all infections. Age, imprisonment and setting of recruitment were statistically associated with HCV seropositivity. Age, speedball career and nationality were significantly associated with HBV seropositivity. Only 56% of the participants in outpatient centres collected their serology results and 43 doses of vaccine against HAV and/or HBV were administered., Conclusions: Despite the existing national risk-reduction strategies implemented since 1993, high prevalence of HCV and HBV infections in injecting drug users is observed. Our study showed that implementing risk-prevention strategies, including immunisation remains difficult with PDUs. Improvement should be looked for by the provision of field healthcare structures providing tests with immediate results, advice, immunisation or treatment if appropriate.
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- 2011
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26. European recommendations for the clinical use of HIV drug resistance testing: 2011 update.
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Vandamme AM, Camacho RJ, Ceccherini-Silberstein F, de Luca A, Palmisano L, Paraskevis D, Paredes R, Poljak M, Schmit JC, Soriano V, Walter H, and Sönnerborg A
- Subjects
- Europe, Genotype, HIV Infections drug therapy, HIV Infections virology, HIV-1 physiology, Humans, Phenotype, Anti-HIV Agents pharmacology, Drug Resistance, Viral drug effects, Drug Resistance, Viral genetics, HIV-1 drug effects, Microbial Sensitivity Tests methods, Practice Guidelines as Topic
- Abstract
The European HIV Drug Resistance Guidelines Panel, established to make recommendations to clinicians and virologists, felt that sufficient new information has become available to warrant an update of its recommendations, explained in both pocket guidelines and this full paper. The Panel makes the following recommendations concerning the indications for resistance testing: for HIV-1 (i) test earliest sample for protease and reverse transcriptase drug resistance in drug-naive patients with acute or chronic infection; (ii) test protease and reverse transcriptase drug resistance at virologic failure, and other drug targets (integrase and envelope) if such drugs were part of the failing regimen; (iii) consider testing for CCR5 tropism at virologic failure or when a change of therapy has to be made in absence of detectable viral load, and in the latter case test DNA or last detectable plasma RNA; (iv) consider testing earliest detectable plasma RNA when a successful nonnucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitor-containing therapy was inappropriately interrupted; (v) genotype source patient when postexposure prophylaxis is considered; for HIV-2, (vi) consider resistance testing where treatment change is needed after treatment failure. The Panel recommends genotyping in most situations, using updated and clinically evaluated interpretation systems. It is mandatory that laboratories performing HIV resistance tests take part regularly in external quality assurance programs, and that they consider storing samples in situations where resistance testing cannot be performed as recommended. Similarly, it is necessary that HIV clinicians and virologists take part in continuous education and discuss problematic clinical cases. Indeed, resistance test results should be used in the context of all other clinically relevant information for predicting therapy response.
- Published
- 2011
27. Impact of the HIV-1 env genetic context outside HR1-HR2 on resistance to the fusion inhibitor enfuvirtide and viral infectivity in clinical isolates.
- Author
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Baatz F, Nijhuis M, Lemaire M, Riedijk M, Wensing AM, Servais JY, van Ham PM, Hoepelman AI, Koopmans PP, Sprenger HG, Devaux C, Schmit JC, and Perez Bercoff D
- Subjects
- Base Sequence, Drug Resistance, Viral drug effects, Enfuvirtide, Genotype, HEK293 Cells, HIV-1 drug effects, HIV-1 pathogenicity, Humans, Inhibitory Concentration 50, Phenotype, Phylogeny, Protein Structure, Secondary, Recombination, Genetic genetics, Tropism drug effects, Tropism genetics, Virion, Drug Resistance, Viral genetics, HIV Envelope Protein gp41 pharmacology, HIV Fusion Inhibitors pharmacology, HIV-1 genetics, Peptide Fragments pharmacology, env Gene Products, Human Immunodeficiency Virus genetics
- Abstract
Resistance mutations to the HIV-1 fusion inhibitor enfuvirtide emerge mainly within the drug's target region, HR1, and compensatory mutations have been described within HR2. The surrounding envelope (env) genetic context might also contribute to resistance, although to what extent and through which determinants remains elusive. To quantify the direct role of the env context in resistance to enfuvirtide and in viral infectivity, we compared enfuvirtide susceptibility and infectivity of recombinant viral pairs harboring the HR1-HR2 region or the full Env ectodomain of longitudinal env clones from 5 heavily treated patients failing enfuvirtide therapy. Prior to enfuvirtide treatment onset, no env carried known resistance mutations and full Env viruses were on average less susceptible than HR1-HR2 recombinants. All escape clones carried at least one of G36D, V38A, N42D and/or N43D/S in HR1, and accordingly, resistance increased 11- to 2800-fold relative to baseline. Resistance of full Env recombinant viruses was similar to resistance of their HR1-HR2 counterpart, indicating that HR1 and HR2 are the main contributors to resistance. Strictly X4 viruses were more resistant than strictly R5 viruses, while dual-tropic Envs featured similar resistance levels irrespective of the coreceptor expressed by the cell line used. Full Env recombinants from all patients gained infectivity under prolonged drug pressure; for HR1-HR2 viruses, infectivity remained steady for 3/5 patients, while for 2/5 patients, gains in infectivity paralleled those of the corresponding full Env recombinants, indicating that the env genetic context accounts mainly for infectivity adjustments. Phylogenetic analyses revealed that quasispecies selection is a step-wise process where selection of enfuvirtide resistance is a dominant factor early during therapy, while increased infectivity is the prominent driver under prolonged therapy.
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- 2011
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28. Chemokine receptor 5 polymorphism in myocardial infarction patients from Luxembourg.
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Rodius S, Lambert C, Devaux C, Schmit JC, Devaux Y, and Wagner DR
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- Adult, Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Creatine Kinase blood, Female, Gene Deletion, Genetic Predisposition to Disease, Humans, Luxembourg, Male, Middle Aged, Troponin T blood, Ventricular Dysfunction, Left genetics, Myocardial Infarction genetics, Receptors, CCR5 genetics
- Abstract
Background: The CC-chemokine receptor 5 (CCR5) is regulating inflammatory pathways and may thus be implicated in the development and progression of heart failure (HF). A 32 base pair deletion of the ccr5 gene, called CCR5delta32, prevents the expression of CCR5 at the cell surface. We analyzed the association between the CCR5delta32 deletion and the risk and severity of myocardial infarction (MI) in a cohort of patients from Luxembourg., Methods: Using TaqMan allelic discrimination assay, we genotyped a total of 1080 patients undergoing coronary angiography. This population contained 3 groups of patients: controls with atypical chest pain, abnormal stress testing but normal coronary angiography (n = 154), patients with angina who underwent uncomplicated primary coronary intervention (n = 230), and patients with acute MI (n = 696). In MI patients, left ventricular ejection fraction (LVEF) was determined 1-month after MI with echocardiography., Results: The frequency of the CCR5delta32 deletion was 16.3% in the global population, and was similar between controls, patients with angina and MI patients. The deletion was not associated with variations of plasma levels of creatine phosphokinase and troponin T, nor it was associated with LVEF, New York Heart Association class or 2-year mortality. The frequency of the deletion was comparable between MI patients with LV dysfunction (EF < or = 40%, n = 82) and no LV dysfunction (EF > 40%, n = 402)., Conclusions: The frequency of the CCR5delta32 deletion in Luxembourg is similar to that observed in other European countries and is not associated with the risk of developing MI and LV dysfunction.
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- 2011
29. HIV-1 drug-resistance patterns among patients on failing treatment in a large number of European countries.
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van de Vijver DA, Wensing AM, Åsjö B, Bruckova M, Jorgensen LB, Camacho R, Horban A, Linka M, Lazanas M, Loveday C, MacRae E, Nielsen C, Paraskevis D, Poljak M, Puchhammer-Stöckl E, Ruiz L, Schmit JC, Stanczak G, Stanojevic M, Vandamme AM, Vercauteren J, Zazzi M, Bacheler L, Lecocq P, Villacian J, and Boucher CA
- Subjects
- Adult, Amino Acid Substitution, Europe, Female, Genotype, HIV Infections virology, HIV Protease genetics, HIV Protease Inhibitors therapeutic use, HIV Reverse Transcriptase genetics, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Mutation, Sequence Analysis, Protein, Treatment Failure, Drug Resistance, Viral genetics, HIV Infections drug therapy, HIV-1 genetics
- Abstract
Background: Information about patterns of HIV-1 drug resistance among treatment-exposed patients is crucial for the development of novel effective drugs. Currently no system exists that monitors patterns of resistance in patients failing therapy., Methods: The study included 1,988 HIV-1 sequences from patients experiencing therapy failure collected between 2000 and 2004 in 15 European countries. Genotypic resistance was interpreted using the ANRS algorithm. Phenotypic resistance was predicted using the Virco geno- to phenotype system., Results: 80.7% of the sequences included at least one drug-resistance mutation. Mutations were found for NRTIs (73.5%), NNRTIs (48.5%), and protease inhibitors (35.8%). Ninety percent of sequences with genotypic resistance harbored M184V, M41L, K103N, D67N, and/or T215Y. Among NRTIs, resistance was most frequently predicted for lamivudine. About half of all sequences had reduced susceptibility for NNRTIs. Resistance to most boosted protease inhibitors was found in < 25%. No sequence had resistance to all currently available drugs., Conclusion: Levels of resistance among patients with therapy failure were high. The patterns of resistance reflect resistance to drugs available for a longer time. Fully suppressive regimens can be designed even for the most mutated HIV because boosted protease inhibitors have remained active against most circulating viruses and new drug classes have become available.
- Published
- 2010
30. Polymorphisms of HIV-2 integrase and selection of resistance to raltegravir.
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Bercoff DP, Triqueneaux P, Lambert C, Oumar AA, Ternes AM, Dao S, Goubau P, Schmit JC, and Ruelle J
- Subjects
- Cell Line, HIV Infections drug therapy, HIV Integrase metabolism, HIV-2 classification, HIV-2 drug effects, HIV-2 genetics, Humans, Molecular Sequence Data, Phylogeny, Raltegravir Potassium, Anti-HIV Agents pharmacology, Drug Resistance, Viral, HIV Infections virology, HIV Integrase genetics, HIV-2 enzymology, Polymorphism, Genetic, Pyrrolidinones pharmacology
- Abstract
Background: Human Immunodeficiency Virus type 2 is naturally resistant to some antiretroviral drugs, restricting therapeutic options for patients infected with HIV-2. Regimens including integrase inhibitors (INI) seem to be effective, but little data on HIV-2 integrase (IN) polymorphisms and resistance pathways are available., Materials and Methods: The integrase coding sequence from 45 HIV-2-infected, INI-naïve, patients was sequenced and aligned against the ROD (group A) or EHO (group B) reference strains and polymorphic or conserved positions were analyzed.To select for raltegravir (RAL)-resistant variants in vitro, the ROD strain was cultured under increasing sub-optimal RAL concentrations for successive rounds. The phenotype of the selected variants was assessed using an MTT assay., Results: We describe integrase gene polymorphisms in HIV-2 clinical isolates from 45 patients. Sixty-seven percent of the integrase residues were conserved. The HHCC Zinc coordination motif, the catalytic triad DDE motif, and AA involved in IN-DNA binding and correct positioning were highly conserved and unchanged with respect to HIV-1 whereas the connecting residues of the N-terminal domain, the dimer interface and C-terminal LEDGF binding domain were highly conserved but differed from HIV-1. The N155 H INI resistance-associated mutation (RAM) was detected in the virus population from one ARV-treated, INI-naïve patient, and the 72I and 201I polymorphisms were detected in samples from 36 and 38 patients respectively. No other known INI RAM was detected.Under RAL selective pressure in vitro, a ROD variant carrying the Q91R+I175M mutations was selected. The Q91R and I175M mutations emerged simultaneously and conferred phenotypic resistance (13-fold increase in IC50). The Q91R+I175M combination was absent from all clinical isolates. Three-dimensional modeling indicated that residue 91 lies on the enzyme surface, at the entry of a pocket containing the DDE catalytic triad and that adding a positive charge (Gln to Arg) might compromise IN-RAL affinity., Conclusions: HIV-2 polymorphisms from 45 INI-naïve patients are described. Conserved regions as well as frequencies of HIV-2 IN polymorphisms were comparable to HIV-1. Two new mutations (Q91R and I175M) that conferred high resistance to RAL were selected in vitro, which might affect therapeutic outcome.
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- 2010
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31. Transmission of drug-resistant HIV-1 is stabilizing in Europe.
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Vercauteren J, Wensing AM, van de Vijver DA, Albert J, Balotta C, Hamouda O, Kücherer C, Struck D, Schmit JC, Asjö B, Bruckova M, Camacho RJ, Clotet B, Coughlan S, Grossman Z, Horban A, Korn K, Kostrikis L, Nielsen C, Paraskevis D, Poljak M, Puchhammer-Stöckl E, Riva C, Ruiz L, Salminen M, Schuurman R, Sonnerborg A, Stanekova D, Stanojevic M, Vandamme AM, and Boucher CA
- Subjects
- Adult, Europe epidemiology, Female, HIV Infections drug therapy, HIV-1 genetics, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Prevalence, Reverse Transcriptase Inhibitors therapeutic use, Drug Resistance, Viral, HIV Infections epidemiology, HIV Infections transmission, HIV-1 drug effects
- Abstract
The SPREAD Programme investigated prospectively the time trend from September 2002 through December 2005 of transmitted drug resistance (TDR) among 2793 patients in 20 European countries and in Israel with newly diagnosed human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) infection. The overall prevalence of TDR was 8.4% (225 of 2687 patients; 95% confidence interval [CI], 7.4%-9.5%), the prevalence of nucleoside reverse-transcriptase inhibitor (NRTI) resistance was 4.7% (125 of 2687 patients; 95% CI, 3.9%-5.5%), the prevalence of nonucleoside reverse-transcriptase inhibitor (NNRTI) resistance was 2.3% (62 of 2687 patients; 95% CI, 1.8%-2.9%), and the prevalence of protease inhibitor (PI) resistance was 2.9% (79 of 2687 patients; 95% CI, 2.4%-3.6%). There was no time trend in the overall TDR or in NRTI resistance, but there was a statistically significant decrease in PI resistance (P = .04) and in NNRTI resistance after an initial increase (P = .02). We found that TDR appears to be stabilizing in Europe, consistent with recent reports of decreasing drug resistance and improved viral suppression in patients treated for HIV-1 infection.
- Published
- 2009
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32. Tracing the HIV-1 subtype B mobility in Europe: a phylogeographic approach.
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Paraskevis D, Pybus O, Magiorkinis G, Hatzakis A, Wensing AM, van de Vijver DA, Albert J, Angarano G, Asjö B, Balotta C, Boeri E, Camacho R, Chaix ML, Coughlan S, Costagliola D, De Luca A, de Mendoza C, Derdelinckx I, Grossman Z, Hamouda O, Hoepelman I, Horban A, Korn K, Kücherer C, Leitner T, Loveday C, Macrae E, Maljkovic-Berry I, Meyer L, Nielsen C, Op de Coul EL, Ormaasen V, Perrin L, Puchhammer-Stöckl E, Ruiz L, Salminen MO, Schmit JC, Schuurman R, Soriano V, Stanczak J, Stanojevic M, Struck D, Van Laethem K, Violin M, Yerly S, Zazzi M, Boucher CA, and Vandamme AM
- Subjects
- Cluster Analysis, Europe epidemiology, HIV Infections virology, HIV-1 isolation & purification, Humans, Israel epidemiology, Molecular Epidemiology, Phylogeny, Sequence Analysis, DNA, Contact Tracing methods, HIV Infections epidemiology, HIV Infections transmission, HIV-1 classification, HIV-1 genetics
- Abstract
Background: The prevalence and the origin of HIV-1 subtype B, the most prevalent circulating clade among the long-term residents in Europe, have been studied extensively. However the spatial diffusion of the epidemic from the perspective of the virus has not previously been traced., Results: In the current study we inferred the migration history of HIV-1 subtype B by way of a phylogeography of viral sequences sampled from 16 European countries and Israel. Migration events were inferred from viral phylogenies by character reconstruction using parsimony. With regard to the spatial dispersal of the HIV subtype B sequences across viral phylogenies, in most of the countries in Europe the epidemic was introduced by multiple sources and subsequently spread within local networks. Poland provides an exception where most of the infections were the result of a single point introduction. According to the significant migratory pathways, we show that there are considerable differences across Europe. Specifically, Greece, Portugal, Serbia and Spain, provide sources shedding HIV-1; Austria, Belgium and Luxembourg, on the other hand, are migratory targets, while for Denmark, Germany, Italy, Israel, Norway, the Netherlands, Sweden, Switzerland and the UK we inferred significant bidirectional migration. For Poland no significant migratory pathways were inferred., Conclusion: Subtype B phylogeographies provide a new insight about the geographical distribution of viral lineages, as well as the significant pathways of virus dispersal across Europe, suggesting that intervention strategies should also address tourists, travellers and migrants.
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- 2009
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33. Impact on replicative fitness of the G48E substitution in the protease of HIV-1: an in vitro and in silico evaluation.
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Zimmer JM, Roman F, Lambert C, Jonckheer A, Vazquez A, Plesséria JM, Servais JY, Covens K, Weber J, Van Laethem K, Schmit JC, Vandamme AM, Quinones-Mateu ME, and De Maeyer M
- Subjects
- Drug Resistance, HIV Infections virology, HIV-1 drug effects, Humans, In Vitro Techniques, Polymorphism, Genetic, Protease Inhibitors pharmacology, Saquinavir therapeutic use, HIV Protease genetics, HIV-1 genetics, Mutation, Virus Replication
- Abstract
We observed an unusual glycine-to-glutamate substitution at protease (PR) residue position 48 (G48E) in an African patient infected with a subtype A1 HIV-1 strain failing a saquinavir-containing regimen. Phenotypic analysis of protease inhibitor (PI) susceptibility showed that the G48E site-directed mutant, when introduced into an NL4-3 HIV-1 PR backbone, was slightly resistant to SQV (2-fold when compared with the wild-type virus). In addition, the G48E and G48E/V82A site-directed mutants were associated with a decrease in fitness, whereas a reversion to the wild type at position 48 was observed in vitro. Growth competition experiments using a novel growth competition assay based on enhanced green fluorescent protein- or Discosoma spp. red fluorescent protein-expressing viruses showed that the replicative fitness of the G48E virus was reduced to 55% compared with the parental NL4-3 virus. Synthesizing all possible site-directed mutants found in the patient strain is too time-consuming; therefore, a molecular dynamics (MD) simulation approach was used to understand why this mutation survived despite its fitness cost. These simulations documented that the G48E mutant interacted with PI resistance mutations (M46I, I54V, Q58E, and L63P) and with natural polymorphisms specific to subtype A1 (E35D, M36I, and R57K) that were present in the patient's virus. We hypothesize that the polymorphisms contained in the PR flap regions of the patient's virus may compensate for the presence of G48E, possibly by restoring the flexibility of the PR flaps. In summary, our results demonstrate that the G48E substitution, when introduced in the context of an HIV-1 subtype B strain, is highly unstable and gives rise to viruses with a poor replicative fitness in vitro. We also showed that when confronted with too many mutations to evaluate in vitro, MD simulations are helpful to draft hypotheses on how polymorphisms can interact with resistance mutations to stabilize their potential fitness cost.
- Published
- 2008
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34. Hepatitis C virus genotypes distribution and transmission risk factors in Luxembourg from 1991 to 2006.
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Roman F, Hawotte K, Struck D, Ternes AM, Servais JY, Arendt V, Hoffman P, Hemmer R, Staub T, Seguin-Devaux C, and Schmit JC
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- Female, Hepatitis C epidemiology, Humans, Luxembourg, Male, Odds Ratio, Prevalence, Prisoners, Risk Factors, Sex Factors, Substance-Related Disorders complications, Time Factors, Genotype, Hepacivirus genetics, Hepatitis C transmission
- Abstract
Aim: To analyze the Hepatitis C virus (HCV) genotype distribution and transmission risk factors in a population of unselected patients in Luxembourg., Methods: Epidemiological information (gender, age and transmission risks) were collected from 802 patients newly diagnosed for hepatitis C and living in Luxembourg, among whom 228 patients referred from prison. Genotyping using 5'noncoding (5'NC) sequencing was performed. We compared categorical data using the Fisher's exact F-test and odds ratios (OR) were calculated for evaluating association of HCV genotype and risk factors., Results: The sex ratio was predominantly male (2.2) and individuals aged less than 40 years represented 49.6% of the population. Genotype 1 was predominant (53.4%) followed by genotype 3 (33%). Among risk factors, intravenous drug usage (IVDU) was the most frequently reported (71.4%) followed by medical-related transmission (17.6%) including haemophilia, transfusion recipients and other nosocomial reasons. Genotype 3 was significantly associated to IVDU (OR = 4.84, P < 0.0001) whereas genotype 1 was significantly associated with a medical procedure (OR = 2.42, P < 0.001). The HCV genotype distribution from inmate patients differed significantly from the rest of the population (Chi-square test with four degrees of freedom, P < 0.0001) with a higher frequency of genotype 3 (46.5% vs 27.5%) and a lower frequency of genotype 1 and 4 (44.7% vs 56.8% and 5.3% vs 9.6%, respectively). IVDU was nearly exclusively reported as a risk factor in prison., Conclusion: We report the first description of the HCV genotype distribution in Luxembourg. The repartition is similar to other European countries, with one of the highest European prevalence rates of genotype 3 (33%). Since serology screening became available in 1991, IVDU remains the most common way of HCV transmission in Luxembourg.
- Published
- 2008
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35. Transmitted drug resistance, selection of resistance mutations and moderate antiretroviral efficacy in HIV-2: analysis of the HIV-2 Belgium and Luxembourg database.
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Ruelle J, Roman F, Vandenbroucke AT, Lambert C, Fransen K, Echahidi F, Piérard D, Verhofstede C, Van Laethem K, Delforge ML, Vaira D, Schmit JC, and Goubau P
- Subjects
- Adult, Africa, Western ethnology, Aged, Anti-Retroviral Agents pharmacology, Belgium epidemiology, CD4 Lymphocyte Count, Cohort Studies, Drug Resistance, Multiple, Viral genetics, Female, Genotype, HIV Infections ethnology, HIV Infections virology, HIV Protease genetics, HIV Reverse Transcriptase genetics, HIV-2 classification, HIV-2 genetics, Humans, Luxembourg epidemiology, Male, Middle Aged, Molecular Sequence Data, Mutation genetics, Polymerase Chain Reaction, RNA, Viral chemistry, Registries, Viral Load, Anti-Retroviral Agents therapeutic use, Drug Resistance, Multiple, Viral drug effects, HIV Infections drug therapy, HIV-2 drug effects, Mutation drug effects
- Abstract
Background: Guidelines established for the treatment of HIV-1 infection and genotype interpretation do not apply for HIV-2. Data about antiretroviral (ARV) drug efficacy and resistance mutations is scarce., Methods: Clinical data about HIV-2 infected patients in Belgium and Luxembourg were collected and the effect of ARV therapy on plasma viral load and CD4 counts were analysed. Viral RNA encoding for protease (PR) and reverse transcriptase (RT) from ARV-naïve and treated patients were sequenced., Results: Sixty-five HIV-2 infected patients were included in this cohort. Twenty patients were treated with 25 different ARV combinations in a total of 34 regimens and six months after the start of ARV therapy, only one third achieved viral load suppression. All of these successful regimens bar one contained protease inhibitors (PIs). Mean CD4 gains in the group of viral load suppressors and the group of patients treated with PI-containing regimens were respectively significantly higher than in the group of non-suppressors and the group of PI-sparing regimens. The most frequent mutations selected under therapy (compared to HIV-2 ROD) were V71I, L90M and I89V within PR. Within RT, they were M184V, Q151M, V111I and K65R. All of these mutations, except K65R and M184V, were also found in variable proportions in ARV-naïve patients., Conclusion: Despite a high rate of ARV treatment failure, better virological and immunological results were achieved with PI-containing regimens. The analysis of polymorphic positions and HIV-2 specific mutations selected during therapy showed for the first time that transmission of drug resistant viruses has occurred in Belgium and Luxembourg. The high heterogeneity in ARV combinations reflects a lack of guidelines for the treatment of HIV-2 infection.
- Published
- 2008
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36. Differences of nine drug resistance interpretation systems in predicting short-term therapy outcomes of treatment-experienced HIV-1 infected patients: a retrospective observational cohort study.
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Helm M, Walter H, Ehret R, Schmit JC, Kurowski M, Knechten H, Korn K, Braun P, and Schmidt B
- Subjects
- Adult, Cohort Studies, Data Interpretation, Statistical, Drug Resistance, Viral genetics, Female, Humans, Immunotherapy, Male, Middle Aged, Multivariate Analysis, Prognosis, Retrospective Studies, Treatment Outcome, Anti-HIV Agents therapeutic use, Drug Evaluation methods, HIV Infections drug therapy, HIV-1
- Abstract
Objective: Drug resistance interpretation systems are used to select the optimal antiretroviral therapy in HIV-infected patients. It is unclear how the systems perform in predicting therapy success and failure and in how far the interpretations are affected by insufficient drug levels., Methods: The accuracy of nine different interpretation systems in predicting therapy outcomes was evaluated using virological, immunological, pharmacological, and clinical data of 130 patients treated at 13 outpatient centers. Individual susceptibility scores of the interpretation systems were converted into active drug scores (ADS) and correlated with therapy success and failure, defined as viral load reduction of equal to or more (n=66) and less than 1 log10 copies/ml (n=64) at three months after drug resistance testing., Results: Three interpretation systems considered the respective therapies as more active compared to the other interpretation systems (p<0.01). These systems predicted therapy success better than the other systems, while the others performed better in predicting therapy failure. Thus, the overall rate of correctly predicted treatment outcomes was comparable between the different systems (73.1-80.0 %). Univariate and multivariate regression analysis revealed significant correlations between the ADS of all interpretation systems and virological therapy outcomes (p<0.0001). In contrast, only three interpretation systems were significantly correlated with immunological therapy outcomes in univariate and just one in multivariate models (p<0.05). Among 128 determinations of drug levels in 64 patient samples, 19.4 % revealed no detectable drug levels. The consideration of insufficient drug levels significantly improved the prediction accuracy of all interpretation systems (p<0.005)., Conclusion: Differences between interpretation systems in predicting therapy failures and success need to be considered for future consensus algorithms. The prediction accuracy of interpretation systems can be improved by consideration of plasma drug levels.
- Published
- 2007
37. The calculated genetic barrier for antiretroviral drug resistance substitutions is largely similar for different HIV-1 subtypes.
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van de Vijver DA, Wensing AM, Angarano G, Asjö B, Balotta C, Boeri E, Camacho R, Chaix ML, Costagliola D, De Luca A, Derdelinckx I, Grossman Z, Hamouda O, Hatzakis A, Hemmer R, Hoepelman A, Horban A, Korn K, Kücherer C, Leitner T, Loveday C, MacRae E, Maljkovic I, de Mendoza C, Meyer L, Nielsen C, Op de Coul EL, Ormaasen V, Paraskevis D, Perrin L, Puchhammer-Stöckl E, Ruiz L, Salminen M, Schmit JC, Schneider F, Schuurman R, Soriano V, Stanczak G, Stanojevic M, Vandamme AM, Van Laethem K, Violin M, Wilbe K, Yerly S, Zazzi M, and Boucher CA
- Subjects
- Adult, Anti-HIV Agents pharmacology, Codon, Evolution, Molecular, Female, Genes, pol, Geography, HIV Protease chemistry, HIV Protease genetics, HIV Protease Inhibitors pharmacology, HIV Reverse Transcriptase chemistry, HIV Reverse Transcriptase genetics, HIV-1 classification, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, RNA, Viral genetics, Reverse Transcriptase Inhibitors pharmacology, Sequence Analysis, DNA, Amino Acid Substitution genetics, Drug Resistance, Viral genetics, HIV-1 drug effects, HIV-1 genetics, Mutation
- Abstract
Background: The genetic barrier, defined as the number of mutations required to overcome drug-selective pressure, is an important factor for the development of HIV drug resistance. Because of high variability between subtypes, particular HIV-1 subtypes could have different genetic barriers for drug resistance substitutions. This study compared the genetic barrier between subtypes using some 2000 HIV-1 sequences (>600 of non-B subtype) isolated from anti-retroviral-naive patients in Europe., Methods: The genetic barrier was calculated as the sum of transitions (scored as 1) and/or transversions (2.5) required for evolution to any major drug resistance substitution. In addition, the number of minor protease substitutions was determined for every subtype., Results: Few dissimilarities were found. An increased genetic barrier was calculated for I82A (subtypes C and G), V108I (subtype G), V118I (subtype G), Q151M (subtypes D and F), L210W (subtypes C, F, G, and CRF02_AG), and P225H (subtype A) (P < 0.001 compared with subtype B). A decreased genetic barrier was found for I82T (subtypes C and G) and V106M (subtype C) (P < 0.001 vs subtype B). Conversely, minor protease substitutions differed extensively between subtypes., Conclusions: Based on the calculated genetic barrier, the rate of drug resistance development may be similar for different HIV-1 subtypes. Because of differences in minor protease substitutions, protease inhibitor resistance could be enhanced in particular subtypes once the relevant major substitutions are selected.
- Published
- 2006
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38. Prevalence of drug-resistant HIV-1 variants in untreated individuals in Europe: implications for clinical management.
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Wensing AM, van de Vijver DA, Angarano G, Asjö B, Balotta C, Boeri E, Camacho R, Chaix ML, Costagliola D, De Luca A, Derdelinckx I, Grossman Z, Hamouda O, Hatzakis A, Hemmer R, Hoepelman A, Horban A, Korn K, Kücherer C, Leitner T, Loveday C, MacRae E, Maljkovic I, de Mendoza C, Meyer L, Nielsen C, Op de Coul EL, Ormaasen V, Paraskevis D, Perrin L, Puchhammer-Stöckl E, Ruiz L, Salminen M, Schmit JC, Schneider F, Schuurman R, Soriano V, Stanczak G, Stanojevic M, Vandamme AM, Van Laethem K, Violin M, Wilbe K, Yerly S, Zazzi M, and Boucher CA
- Subjects
- Adult, Amino Acid Substitution, Europe, Female, HIV Infections drug therapy, HIV-1 genetics, Humans, Male, Mutation, Missense, Drug Resistance, Viral genetics, HIV Infections virology, HIV-1 drug effects
- Abstract
Background: Infection with drug-resistant human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) can impair the response to combination therapy. Widespread transmission of drug-resistant variants has the disturbing potential of limiting future therapy options and affecting the efficacy of postexposure prophylaxis., Methods: We determined the baseline rate of drug resistance in 2208 therapy-naive patients recently and chronically infected with HIV-1 from 19 European countries during 1996-2002., Results: In Europe, 1 of 10 antiretroviral-naive patients carried viruses with > or = 1 drug-resistance mutation. Recently infected patients harbored resistant variants more often than did chronically infected patients (13.5% vs. 8.7%; P=.006). Non-B viruses (30%) less frequently carried resistance mutations than did subtype B viruses (4.8% vs. 12.9%; P<.01). Baseline resistance increased over time in newly diagnosed cases of non-B infection: from 2.0% (1/49) in 1996-1998 to 8.2% (16/194) in 2000-2001., Conclusions: Drug-resistant variants are frequently present in both recently and chronically infected therapy-naive patients. Drug-resistant variants are most commonly seen in patients infected with subtype B virus, probably because of longer exposure of these viruses to drugs. However, an increase in baseline resistance in non-B viruses is observed. These data argue for testing all drug-naive patients and are of relevance when guidelines for management of postexposure prophylaxis and first-line therapy are updated.
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- 2005
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39. Simple DNA extraction method for dried blood spots and comparison of two PCR assays for diagnosis of vertical human immunodeficiency virus type 1 transmission in Rwanda.
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Fischer A, Lejczak C, Lambert C, Servais J, Makombe N, Rusine J, Staub T, Hemmer R, Schneider F, Schmit JC, and Arendt V
- Subjects
- Acquired Immunodeficiency Syndrome transmission, Female, Filtration, Humans, Infant, Newborn, Pregnancy, Sensitivity and Specificity, Acquired Immunodeficiency Syndrome diagnosis, DNA, Viral blood, DNA, Viral isolation & purification, HIV-1 genetics, Infectious Disease Transmission, Vertical, Polymerase Chain Reaction methods
- Abstract
Dried blood spots (DBS) on filter paper facilitate the collection, transport, and storage of blood samples for laboratory use. A rapid and simple DNA extraction procedure from DBS was developed and evaluated for the diagnosis of human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) infection in children by an in-house nested-PCR assay on three genome regions and by the Amplicor HIV-1 DNA prototype assay version 1.5 (Roche Molecular Systems). A total of 150 samples from children born to HIV-1-infected mothers were collected in Kigali, Rwanda, in parallel as DBS and as peripheral blood mononuclear cell (PBMC) pellets. The results obtained on DBS by the two PCR assays were compared to the results of nested PCR on PBMCs. Of 150 PBMC samples, 10 were positive, 117 were negative, and 23 were indeterminate for HIV-1 infection. In DNA extracted from filter papers and amplified by using the in-house nested PCR, 9 of these 10 positive samples (90%) were found to be positive, and 1 was found to be indeterminate (only the pol region could be amplified). All of the negative samples and all of the 23 indeterminate samples tested negative for HIV-1 infection. When we used the Amplicor DNA test on DBS, all of the 10 PBMC-positive samples were found to be positive and all of the 23 indeterminate samples were found to be negative. Of the PBMC-negative samples, 115 were found to be negative and 2 were found to be indeterminate. We conclude that this simple rapid DNA extraction method on DBS in combination with both detection methods gave a reliable molecular diagnosis of HIV-1 infection in children born to HIV-infected mothers.
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- 2004
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40. Uncommon mutations at residue positions critical for enfuvirtide (T-20) resistance in enfuvirtide-naive patients infected with subtype B and non-B HIV-1 strains.
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Roman F, Gonzalez D, Lambert C, Deroo S, Fischer A, Baurith T, Staub T, Boulmé R, Arendt V, Schneider F, Hemmer R, and Schmit JC
- Subjects
- Cohort Studies, Drug Resistance, Viral genetics, Enfuvirtide, HIV Envelope Protein gp41 genetics, HIV Infections drug therapy, HIV-1 drug effects, Humans, Molecular Sequence Data, Sequence Alignment, Time Factors, Anti-HIV Agents therapeutic use, HIV Envelope Protein gp41 therapeutic use, HIV Infections virology, HIV-1 genetics, Mutation, Peptide Fragments therapeutic use
- Abstract
Enfuvirtide (T-20) is the lead compound of the new class of antiretroviral drugs called fusion inhibitors. T-20 resistance-associated mutations located in the heptad repeat 1 (HR-1) domain of gp41 have been described in vitro and in clinical trials. In this study, the authors investigated the primary genotypic T-20 resistance in subtype B and non-B HIV-1 strains from patients at the beginning of their follow-up in the Luxembourg HIV Cohort as well as the emergence of primary resistance to T-20 in patients who had long-term infection with subtype B HIV-1 strains. HR-1 fragments including the gp41 amino acid 36-45, T-20-sensitive region were screened for amino acid variation. No classic T-20 resistance-associated mutations were identified in subtype B or non-B isolates. However, several uncommon mutations were found at residues 37, 39, and 42 for subtype B isolates and at residue 42 for a subtype non-B isolate. The results indicate that primary genotypic T-20 resistance seems to be rare in HIV-1, regardless of subtype or prior antiretroviral therapy (excluding fusion inhibitors). However, episodic variation within HR-1 can occur and needs further phenotypic evaluation in accurate fusion inhibitor resistance assays.
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- 2003
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41. Longitudinal use of a line probe assay for human immunodeficiency virus type 1 protease predicts phenotypic resistance and clinical progression in patients failing highly active antiretroviral therapy.
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Servais J, Lambert C, Plesséria JM, Fontaine E, Robert I, Arendt V, Staub T, Hemmer R, Schneider F, and Schmit JC
- Subjects
- Disease Progression, Drug Resistance, Microbial, Humans, Mutation, Phenotype, Predictive Value of Tests, Retrospective Studies, Treatment Failure, Viral Load, Antiretroviral Therapy, Highly Active, HIV Infections drug therapy, HIV Protease chemistry, HIV Protease genetics, HIV Protease Inhibitors pharmacology
- Abstract
An observational study assessed the longitudinal use of a new line probe assay for the detection of protease mutations. Probe assays for detection of reverse transcriptase (Inno-LiPA HIV-1 RT; Innogenetics) and protease (prototype kit Inno-LiPA HIV Protease; Innogenetics) mutations gave results for 177 of 199 sequential samples collected over 2 years from 26 patients failing two nucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitors and one protease inhibitor (first line: indinavir, n = 6; ritonavir, n = 10; and saquinavir, n = 10). Results were compared to recombinant virus protease inhibitor susceptibility data (n = 87) and to clinical and virological data. Combinations of protease mutations (M46I, G48V, I54V, V82A or -F, I84V, and L90M) predicted phenotypic resistance to the protease inhibitor and to nelfinavir. The sum of protease mutations was associated with virological and clinical outcomes from 6 and 3 months on, respectively. Moreover, a poorer clinical outcome was linked to the sum of reverse transcriptase mutations. In conclusion, despite the limited number of patients studied and the restricted number of codons investigated, probe assay-based genotyping correlates with phenotypic drug resistance and predicts new Centers for Disease Control and Prevention stage B and C clinical events and virological outcome. Line probe assays provide additional prognostic information and should be prospectively investigated for their potential for treatment monitoring.
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- 2002
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42. Evaluation of two commercial kits for the detection of genotypic drug resistance on a panel of HIV type 1 subtypes A through J.
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Fontaine E, Riva C, Peeters M, Schmit JC, Delaporte E, Van Laethem K, Van Vaerenbergh K, Snoeck J, Van Wijngaerden E, De Clercq E, Van Ranst M, and Vandamme AM
- Subjects
- Drug Industry, Genotype, HIV-1 genetics, Humans, Drug Resistance, Microbial genetics, HIV-1 classification, Reagent Kits, Diagnostic
- Abstract
We compared the two commercially available sequencing kits for HIV-1 drug resistance testing, the ViroSeq Genotyping System (Applied Biosystems, Foster City, CA, U.S.A.) and the TRUGENE HIV-1 Genotyping Kit (Visible Genetics, Inc., Toronto, Ontario, Canada), with our in-house genotyping system. Fifteen viral isolates from African patients (6 treated and 9 untreated) covering a panel of HIV-1 subtypes A through J and 7 plasma samples from Belgian and African patients (2 treated and 5 untreated) were tested. All the samples could be amplified and sequenced by the three systems; however, for all systems, alternative amplification/sequencing primers had to be used for some samples belonging to subtype B as well as to other subtypes. The consensus sequence was partially derived from only one strand for the in-house system and for the ViroSeq Genotyping System. The TRUGENE HIV-1 Genotyping Kit scored the highest number of ambiguities, followed by the ViroSeq Genotyping System and the in-house system. For 11 samples, these differences in reporting mixtures affected 14 resistance-related positions, which altered the interpretation toward protease inhibitors for 2 samples when using version 1.2 RetroGram software (Virology Networks, Utrecht, The Netherlands). All three systems were able to sequence diluted samples with a viral load down to 10 3 or 10 4 RNA copies/ml. Our data therefore suggest that the performance of amplification and sequencing primers must be improved to allow fast and reliable resistance testing for all HIV-1 subtypes.
- Published
- 2001
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
43. HIV-associated hematologic disorders are correlated with plasma viral load and improve under highly active antiretroviral therapy.
- Author
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Servais J, Nkoghe D, Schmit JC, Arendt V, Robert I, Staub T, Moutschen M, Schneider F, and Hemmer R
- Subjects
- Adult, Antiretroviral Therapy, Highly Active, Cross-Sectional Studies, Female, HIV Infections complications, HIV Infections drug therapy, HIV Protease Inhibitors therapeutic use, HIV-1 drug effects, Hematologic Diseases drug therapy, Hematologic Diseases etiology, Humans, Longitudinal Studies, Male, Viral Load, Virus Replication, HIV Infections virology, HIV-1 physiology, Hematologic Diseases virology
- Abstract
The relationship between HIV-1 replication and hematologic parameters was examined in two separate studies. The first study was a cross-sectional evaluation of 207 untreated patients. In this study, the proportion of patients with hematologic disorders increased with disease progression. There was a significant inverse correlation between HIV-1 plasma viral load and all hematologic values (r = -0.266 to -0.331). The second study was a longitudinal evaluation of patients on combination antiretroviral therapy (HAART) with hematologic alterations before treatment ( N = 27 with platelets <150,000/microl, 24 with hemoglobin <12 g/dl, 36 with neutrophils <2000/microl and 29 with leukocytes <3000/microl). Samples were analyzed every 3 months for 2 years. At 2 years, >50% of patients experienced a sustained virologic response, with viral loads <500 RNA copies/ml. Hematologic reconstitution occurred progressively for all blood cell lineages and became statistically significant after the sixth month of therapy ( p <.001). Mean values increased from 110 to 180 x 10(3)/microl for platelets, from 10.7 to 12.3 g/dl for hemoglobin (stabilizing finally at 11.4 g/dl), from 1,260 to 2,240/microl for neutrophils, and from 2,260 to 3,600/microl for leukocytes. In conclusion, hematologic disorders are corrected by combination antiretroviral therapy. This suggests a causative role of HIV-1 in hematologic disorders.
- Published
- 2001
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
44. Variant human immunodeficiency virus type 1 proteases and response to combination therapy including a protease inhibitor.
- Author
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Servais J, Lambert C, Fontaine E, Plesséria JM, Robert I, Arendt V, Staub T, Schneider F, Hemmer R, Burtonboy G, and Schmit JC
- Subjects
- Adult, Drug Therapy, Combination, Female, Genetic Variation drug effects, HIV Infections drug therapy, HIV Protease Inhibitors therapeutic use, HIV-1 enzymology, HIV-1 genetics, Humans, Longitudinal Studies, Male, Multivariate Analysis, Polymorphism, Genetic, HIV Protease genetics, HIV Protease Inhibitors pharmacology, HIV-1 drug effects
- Abstract
The objective of this observational study was to assess the genetic variability in the human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) protease gene from HIV type 1 (HIV-1)-positive (clade B), protease inhibitor-naïve patients and to evaluate its association with the subsequent effectiveness of a protease inhibitor-containing triple-drug regimen. The protease gene was sequenced from plasma-derived virus from 116 protease inhibitor-naïve patients. The virological response to a triple-drug regimen containing indinavir, ritonavir, or saquinavir was evaluated every 3 months for as long as 2 years (n = 40). A total of 36 different amino acid substitutions compared to the reference sequence (HIV-1 HXB2) were detected. No substitutions at the active site similar to the primary resistance mutations were found. The most frequent substitutions (prevalence, >10%) at baseline were located at codons 15, 13, 12, 62, 36, 64, 41, 35, 3, 93, 77, 63, and 37 (in ascending order of frequency). The mean number of polymorphisms was 4.2. A relatively poorer response to therapy was associated with a high number of baseline polymorphisms and, to a lesser extent, with the presence of I93L at baseline in comparison with the wild-type virus. A71V/T was slightly associated with a poorer response to first-line ritonavir-based therapy. In summary, within clade B viruses, protease gene natural polymorphisms are common. There is evidence suggesting that treatment response is associated with this genetic background, but most of the specific contributors could not be firmly identified. I93L, occurring in about 30% of untreated patients, may play a role, as A71V/T possibly does in ritonavir-treated patients.
- Published
- 2001
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
45. Comparison of DNA sequencing and a line probe assay for detection of human immunodeficiency virus type 1 drug resistance mutations in patients failing highly active antiretroviral therapy.
- Author
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Servais J, Lambert C, Fontaine E, Plesséria JM, Robert I, Arendt V, Staub T, Schneider F, Hemmer R, Burtonboy G, and Schmit JC
- Subjects
- Acquired Immunodeficiency Syndrome virology, Adult, Drug Resistance, Microbial, Female, Genotype, HIV Infections virology, HIV Protease genetics, HIV Protease Inhibitors therapeutic use, HIV Reverse Transcriptase genetics, HIV-1 isolation & purification, Humans, Indinavir therapeutic use, Male, Polymerase Chain Reaction methods, RNA, Viral isolation & purification, Retrospective Studies, Ritonavir therapeutic use, Saquinavir therapeutic use, Treatment Failure, Acquired Immunodeficiency Syndrome drug therapy, Antiretroviral Therapy, Highly Active, HIV Infections drug therapy, HIV-1 drug effects, HIV-1 genetics, Mutation, RNA, Viral blood
- Abstract
The resistance of human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) to drugs is a major cause of antiretroviral treatment failure. We have compared direct sequencing to a line probe assay (LiPA) for the detection of drug resistance-related mutations in 197 clinical samples, and we have investigated the sequential appearance of mutations under drug pressure. For 26 patients with virological failure despite the use of two nucleoside analogues and one protease inhibitor (indinavir [n = 6], ritonavir [n = 10], and saquinavir [n = 10]), genotypic resistance assays were carried out retrospectively every 3 months for up to 2 years by using direct sequencing (TruGene; Visible Genetics) and a LiPA for detection of mutations in the reverse transcriptase (INNO-LiPA HIV-1 RT; Innogenetics) and the protease (INNO-LiPA HIV Protease, prototype version; Innogenetics) genes. Comparison of the results from both assays found rare major discrepancies (<1% of codons analyzed). INNO-LiPA detected more wild-type-mutant mixtures than sequencing but suffered from a high rate of codon hybridization failures for the reverse transcriptase. LiPA detected earlier and more frequently than sequencing the transient mixed virus population that contained I84V, which appears before V82A in the protease sequence. Mutations M461, G48V, and L90M were often transient and drug pressure related. In conclusion, direct sequencing and LiPAs give concordant results for most clinical isolates. LiPAs are more sensitive for the detection of mixed virus populations. Mutation I84V appears in minor populations in the early steps of the pathways of resistance to indinavir and ritonavir. The fact that some mutations can be found only transiently and in minor virus populations highlights the importance of a low detection limit for resistance assays.
- Published
- 2001
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
46. Prevalence and characteristics of multinucleoside-resistant human immunodeficiency virus type 1 among European patients receiving combinations of nucleoside analogues.
- Author
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Van Vaerenbergh K, Van Laethem K, Albert J, Boucher CA, Clotet B, Floridia M, Gerstoft J, Hejdeman B, Nielsen C, Pannecouque C, Perrin L, Pirillo MF, Ruiz L, Schmit JC, Schneider F, Schoolmeester A, Schuurman R, Stellbrink HJ, Stuyver L, Van Lunzen J, Van Remoortel B, Van Wijngaerden E, Vella S, Witvrouw M, Yerly S, De Clercq E, Destmyer J, and Vandamme AM
- Subjects
- Amino Acid Substitution, CD4 Lymphocyte Count, Codon, Drug Resistance, Microbial, Drug Resistance, Multiple genetics, Drug Therapy, Combination, Europe, Female, Gene Frequency, Genotype, HIV Infections drug therapy, HIV Infections immunology, HIV Reverse Transcriptase genetics, HIV Reverse Transcriptase metabolism, HIV-1 enzymology, HIV-1 genetics, Humans, Male, Microbial Sensitivity Tests, Mutagenesis, Insertional, Nucleosides chemistry, Nucleosides pharmacology, Nucleosides therapeutic use, Phenotype, Anti-HIV Agents pharmacology, HIV Infections virology, HIV-1 drug effects
- Abstract
The prevalence and the genotypic and phenotypic characteristics of multinucleoside-resistant (MNR) human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) variants in Europe were investigated in a multicenter study that involved centers in nine European countries. Study samples (n = 363) collected between 1991 and 1997 from patients exposed to two or more nucleoside analogue reverse transcriptase inhibitors (NRTIs) and 274 control samples from patients exposed to no or one NRTI were screened for two marker mutations of multinucleoside resistance (the Q151M mutation and a mutation with a 2-amino-acid insertion at codon 69, T69S-XX). Q151M was identified in six of the study samples (1. 6%), and T69S-XX was identified in two of the study samples (0.5%; both of them T69S-SS), but both patterns were absent among control samples. Non-NRTI (NNRTI)-related changes were observed in viral strains from two patients, which displayed the Q151M resistance pattern, although the patients were NNRTI naive. The patients whose isolates displayed multinucleoside resistance had received treatment with zidovudine and either didanosine, zalcitabine, or stavudine. Both resistance patterns conferred broad cross-resistance to NRTIs in vitro and a poor response to treatment in vivo. MNR HIV-1 is found only among multinucleoside-experienced patients. Its prevalence is low in Europe, but it should be closely monitored since it seriously limits treatment options.
- Published
- 2000
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
47. Phenotypic assays and sequencing are less sensitive than point mutation assays for detection of resistance in mixed HIV-1 genotypic populations.
- Author
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Van Laethem K, Van Vaerenbergh K, Schmit JC, Sprecher S, Hermans P, De Vroey V, Schuurman R, Harrer T, Witvrouw M, Van Wijngaerden E, Stuyver L, Van Ranst M, Desmyter J, De Clercq E, and Vandamme AM
- Subjects
- Drug Resistance, Microbial genetics, Gene Amplification, Genotype, HIV-1 classification, Humans, Phenotype, Reproducibility of Results, Sensitivity and Specificity, Viral Load, DNA Mutational Analysis methods, HIV Infections drug therapy, HIV-1 genetics, Point Mutation
- Abstract
The sensitivity and discriminatory power of the 151 and 215 amplification refractory mutation system (ARMS) were evaluated, and their performance for the detection of drug resistance in mixed genotypic populations of the reverse transcription (RT) gene of HIV-1 were compared with T7 sequencing, cycle sequencing, the line probe assay (LiPA) HIV-1 RT test, and the recombinant virus assay (RVA). ARMS and the LiPA HIV-1 RT test were shown to be able to detect minor variants that in particular cases comprised only 1%. T7 sequencing on an ALF semiautomated sequencer could correctly score mixtures only when variants were present at 50%. Cycle sequencing on an ABI PRISM 310 improved the sensitivity for mixtures to about 25%. Using RVA, it was shown that at least 50% of the virus population needed to carry the resistance mutation at codon 184 to afford phenotypic resistance against lamivudine. The two point mutation assays therefore proved to be more sensitive methods than sequencing and RVA to reliably determine a gradual shift in HIV-1 drug resistance mutations in follow-up of patients infected with HIV-1. In 4 of 5 treated patients who were followed by ARMS, a gradual shift in resistant genotypic populations was observed during a period of 6 to 19 months. For 1 patient, a shift from wild to mutant type at position 151 occurred within 2 months, without mixed genotypic intermediate type's being detected.
- Published
- 1999
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
48. SRR-SB3, a disulfide-containing macrolide that inhibits a late stage of the replicative cycle of human immunodeficiency virus.
- Author
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Witvrouw M, Balzarini J, Pannecouque C, Jhaumeer-Laulloo S, Esté JA, Schols D, Cherepanov P, Schmit JC, Debyser Z, Vandamme AM, Desmyter J, Ramadas SR, and de Clercq E
- Subjects
- Animals, Cell Line, DNA, Viral analysis, Drug Synergism, HIV-1 physiology, Humans, Mice, Moloney murine sarcoma virus drug effects, Polymerase Chain Reaction, Retroviridae Infections drug therapy, Retroviridae Infections virology, Reverse Transcriptase Inhibitors pharmacology, Sarcoma, Experimental drug therapy, Sarcoma, Experimental virology, Tumor Virus Infections drug therapy, Tumor Virus Infections virology, Anti-HIV Agents pharmacology, Benzamides pharmacology, Disulfides pharmacology, HIV-1 drug effects, Virus Replication drug effects
- Abstract
From a series of macrocyclic diamides possessing the disulfide linkage, only SRR-SB3, a compound that complexes with zinc, was found to inhibit human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1; strain IIIB) replication at a concentration of 1.8 to 6.5 micrograms/ml in MT-4, CEM, and peripheral blood mononuclear cells. SRR-SB3 was toxic to MT-4 cells at a concentration of 15.9 micrograms/ml, resulting in a selectivity index of 9 in these cells. This macrolide was also effective against various other HIV-1 strains, including clinical isolates and HIV-1 strains resistant to protease inhibitors and nucleoside and nonnucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitors. It was also active against various HIV-2 strains, simian immunodeficiency virus (strain MAC251), and Moloney murine sarcoma virus, but not against viruses other than retroviruses. In addition, the compound was found to inhibit chronic HIV-1 infections in vitro. The compound in combination with other antiviral agents, such as zidovudine, zalcitabine, and stavudine, showed an effect that was between additive and synergistic. Time-of-addition experiments indicated that SRR-SB3 acts at a late stage of the HIV-1 replicative cycle.
- Published
- 1997
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
49. Multiple drug resistance to nucleoside analogues and nonnucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitors in an efficiently replicating human immunodeficiency virus type 1 patient strain.
- Author
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Schmit JC, Cogniaux J, Hermans P, Van Vaeck C, Sprecher S, Van Remoortel B, Witvrouw M, Balzarini J, Desmyter J, De Clercq E, and Vandamme AM
- Subjects
- Base Sequence, Drug Resistance, Multiple, HIV Reverse Transcriptase genetics, HIV-1 physiology, Humans, Middle Aged, Molecular Sequence Data, Mutation, Phenotype, Antiviral Agents pharmacology, HIV-1 drug effects, Reverse Transcriptase Inhibitors pharmacology, Virus Replication
- Abstract
A human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1)-seropositive patient was treated sequentially with the dideoxynucleoside (ddN) analogues zidovudine, didanosine, zalcitabine, stavudine, and lamivudine and the nonnucleoside HIV-1-specific reverse transcriptase inhibitor (NNRTI) loviride (alpha-APA). Accumulation of drug resistance mutations (mainly V75I, F77L, K103N, F116Y, Q151M, and M184V) eventually resulted in a strain that was genotypically and phenotypically resistant to all tested ddNs and the majority of NNRTIs. However, the multidrug-resistant virus retained wild type sensitivities to drugs such as foscarnet, phosphonomethoxyethyl adenine, dextran sulfate, JM3100, saquinavir, and NNRTI TSAO-m3T. Drug-resistant isolates showed replication kinetics and infectivity in an in vitro peripheral blood mononuclear cell system similar to those of the wild type isolate from the same patient. The multi-ddN-resistant isolate was not eliminated in a competition culture with the wild type isolate. Sequential therapy did not prevent the appearance of multidrug-resistant virus with a conserved replication rate.
- Published
- 1996
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
50. Quantification of HIV-1 RNA in plasma: comparable results with the NASBA HIV-1 RNA QT and the AMPLICOR HIV monitor test.
- Author
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Vandamme AM, Schmit JC, Van Dooren S, Van Laethem K, Gobbers E, Kok W, Goubau P, Witvrouw M, Peetermans W, De Clercq E, and Desmyter J
- Subjects
- Base Sequence, Disease Progression, Gene Amplification, HIV Core Protein p24 analysis, HIV Core Protein p24 genetics, HIV Core Protein p24 immunology, HIV Infections blood, HIV Infections immunology, HIV Reverse Transcriptase genetics, HIV-1 growth & development, HIV-1 immunology, HIV-1 pathogenicity, Humans, Molecular Sequence Data, RNA, Viral immunology, Reagent Kits, Diagnostic, Reproducibility of Results, Sensitivity and Specificity, HIV Infections etiology, HIV-1 genetics, RNA, Viral analysis, Viral Load
- Abstract
We investigated and compared the reproducibility, accuracy, detection limits, and dynamic ranges of two commercial kits for quantification of RNA viral load using a titrated virus stock (laboratory strain HIV-1 IIIB) and 107 plasma samples of 25 HIV-1-infected patients. The high reproducibility of both methods (SD = 0.2-0.3 log for both methods) allowed reliable detection of a 0.5 log change in RNA viral load. Both methods had a similar detection limit (at least 10(3) RNA copies/ml plasma) and a dynamic range that extended over a 5 log (AMPLICOR) or a 6 log (NASBA) range of HIV-1 input. For HIV-1 IIIB, the viral load was compatible with measurements of virus-associated p24 antigen. For 21 patients (91 samples), the RNA viral load was similar with both methods differing by no more than 0.5 log. For four patients, the difference in viral load between the two methods was > 0.5 log for all 16 samples. For three of these patients, this could be explained by mismatches with primers or probes in the gag sequence: there was no correlation to the viral subtype. The RNA viral load determination was highly sensitive compared with p24 antigen measurement (> 95% of patients had a detectable viral load vs. 40% who had a detectable p24 level), but in the p24-positive samples the correlation between the antigen level and the RNA viral load was of only borderline significance. We also found that the viral RNA in whole blood was stable for at least 48 h during transport at room temperature. These observations show that both the NASBA HIV-1 RNA QT test and the AMPLICOR HIV monitor test are reliable parameters of the viral load, with great promise for their use as potential surrogate markers.
- Published
- 1996
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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