Rate of response to initial antiretroviral therapy according to level of pre‐existing HIV‐1 drug resistance detected by next‐generation sequencing in the strategic timing of antiretroviral treatment (START) study

Author:

Cozzi‐Lepri Alessandro1ORCID,Dunn David1,Tostevin Anna1,Marvig Rasmus L.2,Bennedbæk Marc3,Sharma Shweta4,Kozal Michael J.5,Gompels Mark6ORCID,Pinto Angie N.7ORCID,Lundgren Jens8,Baxter John D.9ORCID,

Affiliation:

1. Institute for Global Health, UCL London UK

2. Center for Genomic Medicine, Rigshospitalet Copenhagen University Hospital Copenhagen Denmark

3. Virus Research and Development Laboratory, Virus and Microbiological Special Diagnostics Statens Serum Institute Copenhagen Denmark

4. Division of Biostatistics, School of Public Health University of Minnesota Minneapolis Minnesota USA

5. Stanford University Palo Alto California USA

6. North Bristol NHS Trust Bristol UK

7. The Kirby Institute University of New South Wales Sydney New South Wales Australia

8. Copenhagen HIV Programme, Rigs Hospitalet University of Copenhagen Copenhagen Denmark

9. Cooper Medical School of Rowan University and Cooper University Health Care Camden New Jersey USA

Abstract

AbstractObjectivesThe main objective of this analysis was to evaluate the impact of pre‐existing drug resistance by next‐generation sequencing (NGS) on the risk of treatment failure (TF) of first‐line regimens in participants enrolled in the START study.MethodsStored plasma from participants with entry HIV RNA >1000 copies/mL were analysed using NGS (llumina MiSeq). Pre‐existing drug resistance was defined using the mutations considered by the Stanford HIV Drug Resistance Database (HIVDB v8.6) to calculate the genotypic susceptibility score (GSS, estimating the number of active drugs) for the first‐line regimen at the detection threshold windows of >20%, >5%, and >2% of the viral population. Survival analysis was conducted to evaluate the association between the GSS and risk of TF (viral load >200 copies/mL plus treatment change).ResultsBaseline NGS data were available for 1380 antiretroviral therapy (ART)‐naïve participants enrolled over 2009–2013. First‐line ART included a non‐nucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitor (NNRTI) in 976 (71%), a boosted protease inhibitor in 297 (22%), or an integrase strand transfer inhibitor in 107 (8%). The proportions of participants with GSS <3 were 7% for >20%, 10% for >5%, and 17% for the >2% thresholds, respectively. The adjusted hazard ratio of TF associated with a GSS of 0–2.75 versus 3 in the subset of participants with mutations detected at the >2% threshold was 1.66 (95% confidence interval 1.01–2.74; p = 0.05) and 2.32 (95% confidence interval 1.32–4.09; p = 0.003) after restricting the analysis to participants who started an NNRTI‐based regimen.ConclusionsUp to 17% of participants initiated ART with a GSS <3 on the basis of NGS data. Minority variants were predictive of TF, especially for participants starting NNRTI‐based regimens.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Pharmacology (medical),Infectious Diseases,Health Policy

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