Characterizing HIV-1 Genetic Subtypes and Drug Resistance Mutations among Children, Adolescents and Pregnant Women in Sierra Leone

Author:

Yendewa George A.ORCID,Lakoh SulaimanORCID,Yendewa Sahr A.,Bangura Khadijah,Tabernilla Andrés,Patiño Lucia,Jiba Darlinda F.,Vandy Alren O.ORCID,Massaquoi Samuel P.,Osório Nuno S.ORCID,Deen Gibrilla F.,Sahr Foday,Salata Robert A.,Poveda EvaORCID

Abstract

Human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) drug resistance (HIVDR) is widespread in sub-Saharan Africa. Children and pregnant women are particularly vulnerable, and laboratory testing capacity remains limited. We, therefore, used a cross-sectional design and convenience sampling to characterize HIV subtypes and resistance-associated mutations (RAMs) in these groups in Sierra Leone. In total, 96 children (age 2–9 years, 100% ART-experienced), 47 adolescents (age 10–18 years, 100% ART-experienced), and 54 pregnant women (>18 years, 72% ART-experienced) were enrolled. Median treatment durations were 36, 84, and 3 months, respectively, while the sequencing success rates were 45%, 70%, and 59%, respectively, among children, adolescents, and pregnant women. Overall, the predominant HIV-1 subtype was CRF02_AG (87.9%, 95/108), with minority variants constituting 12%. Among children and adolescents, the most common RAMs were M184V (76.6%, n = 49/64), K103N (45.3%, n = 29/64), Y181C/V/I (28.1%, n = 18/64), T215F/Y (25.0%, n = 16/64), and V108I (18.8%, n = 12/64). Among pregnant women, the most frequent RAMs were K103N (20.6%, n = 7/34), M184V (11.8%, n = 4/34), Y181C/V/I (5.9%, n = 2/34), P225H (8.8%, n = 3/34), and K219N/E/Q/R (5.9%, n = 2/34). Protease and integrase inhibitor-RAMs were relatively few or absent. Based on the genotype susceptibility score distributions, 73%, 88%, and 14% of children, adolescents, and pregnant women, respectively, were not susceptible to all three drug components of the WHO preferred first-line regimens per 2018 guidelines. These findings suggest that routine HIVDR surveillance and access to better ART choices may improve treatment outcomes in Sierra Leone.

Funder

Roe Green Travel Medicine Award, University Hospitals Cleveland Medical Center

Publisher

MDPI AG

Subject

Genetics (clinical),Genetics

Reference45 articles.

1. HIV Drug Resistance Report 2019https://www.who.int/hiv/pub/drugresistance/hivdr-report-2019/en/

2. Global Action Plan on HIV Drug Resistance (2017–2021)https://apps.who.int/iris/bitstream/handle/10665/255883/9789241512848-eng.pdf?sequence=1

3. UNAIDS Data 2019https://www.unaids.org/en/resources/documents/2019/2019-UNAIDS-data

4. HIV/AIDS in Sierra Leone: Characterizing the Hidden Epidemic

5. Impact of the Ebola epidemic on clinical outcomes of HIV-infected soldiers and their dependents in Sierra Leone

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