We studied the clinical resistance to acyclovir of infections with varicella-zoster viruses (VZV) in patients with acquired immunodeficiency syndrome, and we correlated it to virologic analyses. Eleven patients with VZV infections (treated with acyclovir, 30 mg/kg/day, given intravenously, or 4 g/day, given orally) were included in the study because of the failure of 10 days of acyclovir therapy. Susceptibility of VZV isolates to acyclovir was tested using a plaque reduction assay to determine the 50% inhibitory concentration (IC50) of acyclovir and the SI50 (IC50 of the patient isolate/IC50 of the reference strain) to acyclovir. The thymidine kinase (TK) gene, which supports the resistance, was sequenced on amplified products. Only 3 patients had a significant increase in the IC50, as compared with the IC50 of the reference strain (SI50 of ≥4), and a mutation in the TK gene. For the other 8 patients, the clinical resistance was not confirmed by the virologic results: the SI50 was <4, and no mutation was detected in the TK gene. Because no acyclovir-resistant strain appeared during a shorter period of time, we suggest an increase in the duration of the treatment to 21 days before acyclovir resistance is suspected.
CITATION STYLE
Saint-Leéger, E., Caumes, E., Breton, G., Douard, D., Saiag, P., Huraux, J. M., … Fillet, A. M. (2001). Clinical and virologic characterization of acyclovir-resistant varicella-zoster viruses isolated from 11 patients with acquired immunodeficiency syndrome. Clinical Infectious Diseases, 33(12), 2061–2067. https://doi.org/10.1086/324503
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