Impact of genotypic diversity on selection of subtype-specific drug resistance profiles during raltegravir-based therapy in individuals infected with B and BF recombinant HIV-1 strains

Author:

Sánchez Daniela12,Arazi Caillaud Solange3,Zapiola Ines4,Fernandez Giuliano Silvina4,Bologna Rosa3,Mangano Andrea1,Aulicino Paula C1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Laboratorio de Biología Celular y Retrovirus-CONICET, Unidad de Virología y Epidemiología Molecular, Hospital de Pediatría “Juan P. Garrahan”, Buenos Aires, Argentina

2. Centro Provincial VIH/SIDA y Hepatitis Virales de la Provincia de Buenos Aires, Instituto Biológico Dr Tomás Perón, La Plata, Argentina

3. Servicio de Epidemiología e Infectología, Hospital de Pediatría “Juan P. Garrahan”, Buenos Aires, Argentina

4. Unidad de Virología, Hospital de Infecciosas “Francisco J. Muñiz”, Buenos Aires, Argentina

Abstract

AbstractBackgroundCurrent knowledge on HIV-1 resistance to integrase inhibitors (INIs) is based mostly on subtype B strains. This contrasts with the increasing use of INIs in low- and middle-income countries, where non-B subtypes predominate.Materials and methodsHIV-1 drug resistance genotyping was performed in 30 HIV-1-infected individuals undergoing virological failure to raltegravir. Drug resistance mutations (DRMs) and HIV-1 subtype were characterized using Stanford HIVdb and phylogenetic analyses.ResultsOf the 30 integrase (IN) sequences, 14 were characterized as subtype F (47%), 8 as subtype B (27%), 7 as BF recombinants (23%) and 1 as a putative CRF05_DF (3%). In 25 cases (83%), protease and reverse transcriptase (PR-RT) sequences from the same individuals confirmed the presence of different BF recombinants. Stanford HIVdb genotyping was concordant with phylogenetic inference in 70% of IN and 60% of PR-RT sequences. INI DRMs differed between B and F IN subtypes, with Q148K/R/H, G140S and E138K/A being more prevalent in subtype B (63% versus 0%, P = 0.0021; 50% versus 0%, P = 0.0096; and 50% versus 0%, P = 0.0096, respectively). These differences were independent of the time on raltegravir therapy or viral load at the time of genotyping. INI DRMs in subtype F IN genomes predicted a lower level of resistance to raltegravir and no cross-resistance to second-generation INIs.ConclusionsAlternative resistance pathways to raltegravir develop in subtypes B and F IN genomes, with implications for clinical practice. Evaluating the role of HIV-1 subtype in development and persistence of mutations that confer resistance to INIs will be important to improve algorithms for resistance testing and optimize the use of INIs.

Funder

National Ministry of Health from Argentina

Becas Abraam Sonis Salud Investiga 2018

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Infectious Diseases,Pharmacology (medical),Pharmacology,Microbiology (medical)

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