Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://ir.mu.ac.ke:8080/jspui/handle/123456789/190
Title: HIV diversity and drug resistance from plasma and non-plasma analytes in a large treatment programme in western Kenya
Authors: Kantor, Rami
DeLong, Allison
Balamane, Maya
Schreier, Leeann
Lloyd, Robert M, Jr
Injera, Wilfred
Kamle, Lydia
Mambo, Fidelis
Muyonga, Sarah
Katzenstein, David
Hogan, Joseph
Buziba, Nathan
Diero, Lameck
Keywords: HIV
Drug
Resistance
Subtype
Diversity
Analyte
AMPATH
Kenya
Issue Date: Nov-2014
Publisher: Journal of the International AIDS Society
Series/Report no.: ;Vol 17 (2014)
Abstract: Introduction: Antiretroviral resistance leads to treatment failure and resistance transmission. Resistance data in western Kenya are limited. Collection of non-plasma analytes may provide additional resistance information. Methods: We assessed HIV diversity using the REGA tool, transmitted resistance by the WHO mutation list and acquired resistance upon first-line failure by the IAS_USA mutation list, at the Academic Model Providing Access to Healthcare (AMPATH), a major treatment programme in western Kenya. Plasma and four non-plasma analytes, dried blood-spots (DBS), dried plasmaspots (DPS), ViveSTTM-plasma (STP) and ViveST-blood (STB), were compared to identify diversity and evaluate sequence concordance. Results: Among 122 patients, 62 were treatment-naı¨ve and 60 treatment-experienced; 61% were female, median age 35 years, median CD4 182 cells/mL, median viral-load 4.6 log10 copies/mL. One hundred and ninety-six sequences were available for 107/122 (88%) patients, 58/62 (94%) treatment-naı¨ve and 49/60 (82%) treated; 100/122 (82%) plasma, 37/78 (47%) attempted DBS, 16/45 (36%) attempted DPS, 14/44 (32%) attempted STP from fresh plasma and 23/34 (68%) from frozen plasma, and 5/42 (12%) attempted STB. Plasma and DBS genotyping success increased at higher VL and shorter shipment-to-genotyping time. Main subtypes were A (62%), D (15%) and C (6%). Transmitted resistance was found in 1.8% of plasma sequences, and 7% combining analytes. Plasma resistance mutations were identified in 91% of treated patients, 76% NRTI, 91% NNRTI; 76% dual-class; 60% with intermediate-high predicted resistance to future treatment options; with novel mutation co-occurrence patterns. Nearly 88% of plasma mutations were identified in DBS, 89% in DPS and 94% in STP. Of 23 discordant mutations, 92% in plasma and 60% in non-plasma analytes were mixtures. Mean whole-sequence discordance from frozen plasma reference was 1.1% for plasma-DBS, 1.2% plasma-DPS, 2.0% plasma-STP and 2.3% plasma-STB. Of 23 plasma-STP discordances, one mutation was identified in plasma and 22 in STP (pB0.05). Discordance was inversely significantly related to VL for DBS. Conclusions: In a large treatment programme in western Kenya, we report high HIV-1 subtype diversity; low plasma transmitted resistance, increasing when multiple analytes were combined; and high-acquired resistance with unique mutation patterns. Resistance surveillance may be augmented by using non-plasma analytes for lower-cost genotyping in resource-limited settings.
URI: http://www.jiasociety.org/index.php/jias/article/view/19262
http://ir.mu.ac.ke:8080/xmlui/handle/123456789/190
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