Low-abundance HIV drug-resistant viral variants in treatment-experienced persons correlate with historical antiretroviral use

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Abstract

Background: It is largely unknown how frequently low-abundance HIV drug-resistant variants at levels under limit of detection of conventional genotyping (<20% of quasi-species) are present in antiretroviral-experienced persons experiencing virologic failure. Further, the clinical implications of low-abundance drug-resistant variants at time of virologic failure are unknown. Methodology/Principal Findings: Plasma samples from 22 antiretroviral-experienced subjects collected at time of virologic failure (viral load 1380 to 304,000 copies/mL) were obtained from a specimen bank (from 2004-2007). The prevalence and profile of drug-resistant mutations were determined using Sanger sequencing and ultra-deep pyrosequencing. Genotypes were interpreted using Stanford HIV database algorithm. Antiretroviral treatment histories were obtained by chart review and correlated with drug-resistant mutations. Low-abundance drug-resistant mutations were detected in all 22 subjects by deep sequencing and only in 3 subjects by Sanger sequencing. In total they accounted for 90 of 247 mutations (36%) detected by deep sequencing; the majority of these (95%) were not detected by standard genotyping. A mean of 4 additional mutations per subject were detected by deep sequencing (p<0.0001, 95%CI: 2.85-5.53). The additional low-abundance drug-resistant mutations increased a subject's genotypic resistance to one or more antiretrovirals in 17 of 22 subjects (77%). When correlated with subjects' antiretroviral treatment histories, the additional low-abundance drug-resistant mutations correlated with the failing antiretroviral drugs in 21% subjects and correlated with historical antiretroviral use in 79% subjects (OR, 13.73; 95% CI, 2.5-74.3, p = 0.0016). Conclusions/Significance: Low-abundance HIV drug-resistant mutations in antiretroviral-experienced subjects at time of virologic failure can increase a subject's overall burden of resistance, yet commonly go unrecognized by conventional genotyping. The majority of unrecognized resistant mutations correlate with historical antiretroviral use. Ultra-deep sequencing can provide important historical resistance information for clinicians when planning subsequent antiretroviral regimens for highly treatment-experienced patients, particularly when their prior treatment histories and longitudinal genotypes are not available. © 2009 Le et al.

Figures

  • Figure 1. Mutation detection by standard versus ultra-deep sequencing according to mutation classes. A mean of 4 additional mutations per subject were detected by ultra-deep sequencing. The difference in the number of mutations detected by the two methods were statistically significant for NRTI (nucleotide/nucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitor), NNRTI (non-nucleotide reverse transcriptase inhibitor), and PI (protease inhibitor) mutations. Two-tailed p values and 95% confidence intervals were calculated from the paired Student T test. doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0006079.g001

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CITATION STYLE

APA

Le, T., Chiarella, J., Simen, B. B., Hanczaruk, B., Egholm, M., Landry, M. L., … Kozal, M. J. (2009). Low-abundance HIV drug-resistant viral variants in treatment-experienced persons correlate with historical antiretroviral use. PLoS ONE, 4(6). https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0006079

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