Genetic diversity of HIV in seminal plasma remains higher than in blood after short-term antiretroviral therapy

Author:

López Zúñiga Miguel Ángel,Chueca Natalia,de Salazar AdolfoORCID,Fernández Caballero José Angel,Gutierrez Valencia Alicia,Vinuesa García David,Omar Mohamed Balgahata Mohamed,Hidalgo Tenorio Carmen,Lopez-Ruz Miguel Angel,Garcia FedericoORCID

Abstract

ObjectiveTo provide insight on viral kinetics and genetic diversity of HIV in seminal plasma at baseline and 1 month after initiating antiretroviral therapy (ART).Patients and methodsBlood and seminal samples from patients with newly diagnosed HIV were obtained before ART initiation (T0) and 1 month after ART initiation (T1). HIV env genetic diversity was studied using deep sequencing Nextera and V3 chemistry in a MiSeq Illumina platform. The number of viral quasispecies (5% cut-off) and Shannon Index were used to analyse diversity.ResultsForty-seven ART-naive patients were recruited between September 2016 and November 2018. At enrolment, the number of quasispecies in blood (median 4 (IQR 2–5)) was lower than in the seminal compartment (median 6, (IQR 4–8)) (p<0.01); the Shannon Index was also higher (p<0.001) in the seminal compartment than in blood (1.77 vs 0.64). At T1, for the 13 patients with detectable HIV in both blood/seminal plasma, viral diversity remained higher (p=0.139) in seminal plasma (median 2 (IQR 1–4.5)) than in blood (median 1 (IQR 1–1.5)) Integrase inhibitors (INI)-based regimens achieved higher levels of undetectability and led more frequently to lower variability (p<0.001) than protease inhibitors (PI) or non-nucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitors (NNRTI).ConclusionWe provide here further evidence of a larger genetic diversity in seminal plasma, both at diagnosis and short term after ART initiation. Our results strengthen previous findings on HIV diversity in seminal plasma. In addition, INIs decrease variability more rapidly than PI and NNRTI in both blood and seminal plasma.

Funder

Plan Nacional de I+D+I and Fondo Europeo de Desarrollo Regional-FEDER

Fondo de Investigación Sanitaria

Publisher

BMJ

Subject

Infectious Diseases,Dermatology

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