Study of the impact of HIV genotypic drug resistance testing on therapy efficacy.

Jan 30, 2002Verhandelingen - Koninklijke Academie voor Geneeskunde van Belgie

How HIV drug resistance testing relates to treatment success

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Abstract

HIV strains with resistance-related mutations to one or more classes of antiretroviral drugs are found in 26-30% of Belgian antiretroviral-naïve patients.

  • The prevalence of baseline genotypic resistance has remained relatively constant over time in the studied population.
  • An increasing trend in resistance to 3TC and protease inhibitors was observed, likely due to the transmission of variants with resistance mutations selected during therapy.
  • No clear trend in baseline NNRTI resistance was noted, suggesting the presence of baseline polymorphisms rather than acquired resistance.
  • Starting highly active antiretroviral therapy (HAART) can prevent viral breakthrough for up to 44 months in 60% of antiretroviral-naïve patients.
  • Suboptimal adherence to therapy is associated with virologic failure and accumulation of resistance mutations.
  • The presence of baseline resistance mutations significantly predicts therapy failure, while their absence does not reliably predict a positive therapy response.

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