PLoS Medicine (Nov 2017)

Virological response and resistance among HIV-infected children receiving long-term antiretroviral therapy without virological monitoring in Uganda and Zimbabwe: Observational analyses within the randomised ARROW trial.

  • Alexander J Szubert,
  • Andrew J Prendergast,
  • Moira J Spyer,
  • Victor Musiime,
  • Philippa Musoke,
  • Mutsa Bwakura-Dangarembizi,
  • Patricia Nahirya-Ntege,
  • Margaret J Thomason,
  • Emmanuel Ndashimye,
  • Immaculate Nkanya,
  • Oscar Senfuma,
  • Boniface Mudenge,
  • Nigel Klein,
  • Diana M Gibb,
  • A Sarah Walker,
  • ARROW Trial Team

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pmed.1002432
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 14, no. 11
p. e1002432

Abstract

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BackgroundAlthough WHO recommends viral load (VL) monitoring for those on antiretroviral therapy (ART), availability in low-income countries remains limited. We investigated long-term VL and resistance in HIV-infected children managed without real-time VL monitoring.Methods and findingsIn the ARROW factorial trial, 1,206 children initiating ART in Uganda and Zimbabwe between 15 March 2007 and 18 November 2008, aged a median 6 years old, with median CD4% of 12%, were randomised to monitoring with or without 12-weekly CD4 counts and to receive 2 nucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitors (2NRTI, mainly abacavir+lamivudine) with a non-nucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitor (NNRTI) or 3 NRTIs as long-term ART. All children had VL assayed retrospectively after a median of 4 years on ART; those with >1,000 copies/ml were genotyped. Three hundred and sixteen children had VL and genotypes assayed longitudinally (at least every 24 weeks). Overall, 67 (6%) switched to second-line ART and 54 (4%) died. In children randomised to WHO-recommended 2NRTI+NNRTI long-term ART, 308/378 (81%) monitored with CD4 counts versus 297/375 (79%) without had VL ConclusionsIn this study, children receiving first-line ART in sub-Saharan Africa without real-time VL monitoring had good virological and resistance outcomes over 4 years, regardless of CD4 monitoring strategy. Many children with detectable low-level viraemia spontaneously resuppressed, highlighting the importance of confirming virological failure before switching to second-line therapy. Children experiencing rebound ≥5,000 copies/ml were much less likely to resuppress, but NRTI resistance increased only slowly. These results are relevant to the increasing numbers of HIV-infected children receiving first-line ART in sub-Saharan Africa with limited access to virological monitoring.Trial registrationISRCTN Registry, ISRCTN24791884.