Short Communication: Nucleoside Reverse Transcriptase Inhibitors with Reduced Predicted Activity Do Not Impair Second-Line Therapy with Lopinavir/Ritonavir or Darunavir/Ritonavir

Archive ouverte

Villabona-Arenas, Christian, J | Eymard-Duvernay, Sabrina | Aghokeng Fobang, Avelin | Guichet, Emilande | Toure-Kane, Coumba | Bado, Guillaume | Koulla-Shiro, Sinata | Delaporte, Eric | Ciaffi, Laura | Peeters, Martine

Edité par CCSD ; Mary Ann Liebert -

International audience. Second-line therapy randomized trials with lopinavir/ritonavir question the value of resistance testing to guide nucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitor (NRTI) selection. In this study, we investigated the association between baseline drug resistance and treatment outcome after 104 weeks of second-line therapy with NRTIs and either darunavir/ritonavir or lopinavir/ritonavir in West-central Africa. We did an observational analysis of data from 387 individuals in a randomized, open-label 2LADY trial in Burkina Faso, Cameroon, and Senegal. We modeled the association between RTI drug resistance mutations (DRMs) and virological failure (VF) (viral load [VL] \textless50 copies/mL) at week 104 using logistic regressions. Covariates included baseline VL and CD4+ count, demographic, and adherence data. Overall, 193 (49.9%), 150 (38.8%), and 44 (11.4%) individuals had, respectively, low/none (genotypic susceptibility score [GSS] \textless1), intermediate (GSS = 1), and high predicted NRTI activity (GSS \textgreater1) in their prescribed second-line regimen. The average number of DRMs by drug class, the proportion of individuals by GSS category, and the duration of first-line therapy were not associated with VF (p \textgreater .05). High VL at switch was the only consistent prognostic factor for VF after multivariate adjustment (p \textless .01). Suboptimal adherence, high predicted RTI activity, or low NRTI mutations were associated with VF (p \textless .05) when using higher end points for VF or in the intention-to-treat analysis. In conclusion, the use of RTIs with predicted reduced activity does not impair second-line protease inhibitor-based therapy. Therefore, HIV care in resource-limited settings should prioritize strategies to improve adherence and targeted VL testing over drug resistance testing for selecting NRTIs during a protease-based second-line switch.

Consulter en ligne

Suggestions

Du même auteur

Drug resistance mutations in HIV: new bioinformatics approaches and challenges

Archive ouverte | Blassel, Luc | CCSD

International audience. Drug resistance mutations appear in HIV under treatment pressure. Resistant variants can be transmitted to treatmentnaive individuals, which can lead to rapid virological failure and can limi...

Short Communication: High Viral Load and Multidrug Resistance Due to Late Switch to Second-Line Regimens Could Be a Major Obstacle to Reach the 90-90-90 UNAIDS Objectives in Sub-Saharan Africa

Archive ouverte | Guichet, Emilande | CCSD

International audience. In the context of lifelong antiretroviral treatment (ART) as early as possible and to end the HIV/AIDS epidemic as a public health treat by 2030, it is important to evaluate the potential ris...

Boosted protease inhibitor monotherapy versus boosted protease inhibitor plus lamivudine dual therapy as second-line maintenance treatment for HIV-1-infected patients in sub-Saharan Africa (ANRS12 286/MOBIDIP): a multicentre, randomised, parallel, open-label, superiority trial

Archive ouverte | Ciaffi, Laura | CCSD

International audience

Chargement des enrichissements...