High Degree of Interlaboratory Reproducibility of Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1 Protease and Reverse Transcriptase Sequencing of Plasma Samples from Heavily Treated Patients

Author:

Shafer Robert W.12,Hertogs Kurt3,Zolopa Andrew R.1,Warford Ann2,Bloor Stuart4,Betts Bradley J.5,Merigan Thomas C.1,Harrigan Richard3,Larder Brendon A.4

Affiliation:

1. Division of Infectious Diseases and Center for AIDS Research, Stanford University Medical Center,1 and

2. Diagnostic Virology Laboratory2 and

3. Central Virological Laboratory, VIRCO Belgium, Mechelen, Belgium3; and

4. VIRCO UK, Cambridge CB4 4GH, United Kingdom4

5. Department of BioStatistics,5 Stanford University Hospital, Stanford, California 94305;

Abstract

ABSTRACT We assessed the reproducibility of human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) reverse transcriptase (RT) and protease sequencing using cryopreserved plasma aliquots obtained from 46 heavily treated HIV-1-infected individuals in two laboratories using dideoxynucleotide sequencing. The rates of complete sequence concordance between the two laboratories were 99.1% for the protease sequence and 99.0% for the RT sequence. Approximately 90% of the discordances were partial, defined as one laboratory detecting a mixture and the second laboratory detecting only one of the mixture's components. Only 0.1% of the nucleotides were completely discordant between the two laboratories, and these were significantly more likely to occur in plasma samples with lower plasma HIV-1 RNA levels. Nucleotide mixtures were detected at approximately 1% of the nucleotide positions, and in every case in which one laboratory detected a mixture, the second laboratory either detected the same mixture or detected one of the mixture's components. The high rate of concordance in detecting mixtures and the fact that most discordances between the two laboratories were partial suggest that most discordances were caused by variation in sampling of the HIV-1 quasispecies by PCR rather than by technical errors in the sequencing process itself.

Publisher

American Society for Microbiology

Subject

Microbiology (medical)

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