Unnecessary Antiretroviral Treatment Switches and Accumulation of HIV Resistance Mutations; Two Arguments for Viral Load Monitoring in Africa

Kim C. E. Sigaloff, Raph L. Hamers, Carole L. Wallis, Cissy Kityo, Margaret Siwale, Prudence Ive, Mariette E. Botes, Kishor Mandaliya, Maureen Wellington, Akin Osibogun, Wendy S. Stevens, Michèle van Vugt, Tobias F. Rinke de Wit

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Abstract

Objectives: This study aimed to investigate the consequences of using clinicoimmunological criteria to detect antiretroviral treatment (ART) failure and guide regimen switches in HIV-infected adults in sub-Saharan Africa. Frequencies of unnecessary switches, patterns of HIV drug resistance, and risk factors for the accumulation of nucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitor (NRTI)-associated mutations were evaluated. Methods: Cross-sectional analysis of adults switching ART regimens at 13 clinical sites in 6 African countries was performed. Two types of failure identification were compared: diagnosis of clinicoimmunological failure without viral load testing (CIF only) or CIF with local targeted viral load testing (targeted VL). After study enrollment, reference HIV RNA and genotype were determined retrospectively. Logistic regression assessed factors associated with multiple thymidine analogue mutations (TAMs) and NRTI cross-resistance (>= 2 TAMs or Q151M or K65R/K70E). Results: Of 250 patients with CIF switching to second-line ART, targeted VL was performed in 186. Unnecessary switch at reference HIV RNA <1000 copies per milliliter occurred in 46.9% of CIF only patients versus 12.4% of patients with targeted VL (P <0.001). NRTI cross-resistance was observed in 48.0% of 183 specimens available for genotypic analysis, comprising >= 2 TAMs (37.7%), K65R (7.1%), K70E (3.3%), or Q151M (3.3%). The presence of NRTI cross-resistance was associated with the duration of ART exposure and zidovudine use. Conclusions: Clinicoimmunological monitoring without viral load testing resulted in frequent unnecessary regimen switches. Prolonged treatment failure was indicated by extensive NRTI cross-resistance. Access to virological monitoring should be expanded to prevent inappropriate switches, enable early failure detection and preserve second-line treatment options in Africa
Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)23-31
Number of pages9
JournalJournal of acquired immune deficiency syndromes (1999)
Volume58
Issue number1
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 1 Sept 2011

Keywords

  • Africa
  • Drug resistance
  • HIV
  • Highly active antiretroviral therapy
  • Viremia copyright © lippincott williams & wilkins

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