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Assessing transmissibility of HIV-1 drug resistance mutations from treated and from drug-naive individuals.
- Source :
- AIDS (London, England); vol 29, iss 15, 2045-2052; 0269-9370
- Publication Year :
- 2015
-
Abstract
- ObjectivesSurveillance drug resistance mutations (SDRMs) in drug-naive patients are typically used to survey HIV-1-transmitted drug resistance (TDR). We test here how SDRMs in patients failing treatment, the original source of TDR, contribute to assessing TDR, transmissibility and transmission source of SDRMs.DesignThis is a retrospective observational study analyzing a Portuguese cohort of HIV-1-infected patients.MethodsThe prevalence of SDRMs to protease inhibitors, nucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitors (NRTIs) and nonnucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitors (NNRTIs) in drug-naive and treatment-failing patients was measured for 3554 HIV-1 subtype B patients. Transmission ratio (prevalence in drug-naive/prevalence in treatment-failing patients), average viral load and robust linear regression with outlier detection (prevalence in drug-naive versus in treatment-failing patients) were analyzed and used to interpret transmissibility.ResultsPrevalence of SDRMs in drug-naive and treatment-failing patients were linearly correlated, but some SDRMs were classified as outliers - above (PRO: D30N, N88D/S, L90 M, RT: G190A/S/E) or below (RT: M184I/V) expectations. The normalized regression slope was 0.073 for protease inhibitors, 0.084 for NRTIs and 0.116 for NNRTIs. Differences between SDRMs transmission ratios were not associated with differences in viral loads.ConclusionThe significant linear correlation between prevalence of SDRMs in drug-naive and in treatment-failing patients indicates that the prevalence in treatment-failing patients can be useful to predict levels of TDR. The slope is a cohort-dependent estimate of rate of TDR per drug class and outlier detection reveals comparative persistence of SDRMs. Outlier SDRMs with higher transmissibility are more persistent and more likely to have been acquired from drug-naive patients. Those with lower transmissibility have faster reversion dynamics after transmission and are associated with acquisition from treatme
Details
- Database :
- OAIster
- Journal :
- AIDS (London, England); vol 29, iss 15, 2045-2052; 0269-9370
- Notes :
- application/pdf, AIDS (London, England) vol 29, iss 15, 2045-2052 0269-9370
- Publication Type :
- Electronic Resource
- Accession number :
- edsoai.on1287338119
- Document Type :
- Electronic Resource