PLoS Medicine (Apr 2005)

Impact of HIV-1 subtype and antiretroviral therapy on protease and reverse transcriptase genotype: results of a global collaboration.

  • Rami Kantor,
  • David A Katzenstein,
  • Brad Efron,
  • Ana Patricia Carvalho,
  • Brian Wynhoven,
  • Patricia Cane,
  • John Clarke,
  • Sunee Sirivichayakul,
  • Marcelo A Soares,
  • Joke Snoeck,
  • Candice Pillay,
  • Hagit Rudich,
  • Rosangela Rodrigues,
  • Africa Holguin,
  • Koya Ariyoshi,
  • Maria Belen Bouzas,
  • Pedro Cahn,
  • Wataru Sugiura,
  • Vincent Soriano,
  • Luis F Brigido,
  • Zehava Grossman,
  • Lynn Morris,
  • Anne-Mieke Vandamme,
  • Amilcar Tanuri,
  • Praphan Phanuphak,
  • Jonathan N Weber,
  • Deenan Pillay,
  • P Richard Harrigan,
  • Ricardo Camacho,
  • Jonathan M Schapiro,
  • Robert W Shafer

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pmed.0020112
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 2, no. 4
p. e112

Abstract

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The genetic differences among HIV-1 subtypes may be critical to clinical management and drug resistance surveillance as antiretroviral treatment is expanded to regions of the world where diverse non-subtype-B viruses predominate.To assess the impact of HIV-1 subtype and antiretroviral treatment on the distribution of mutations in protease and reverse transcriptase, a binomial response model using subtype and treatment as explanatory variables was used to analyze a large compiled dataset of non-subtype-B HIV-1 sequences. Non-subtype-B sequences from 3,686 persons with well characterized antiretroviral treatment histories were analyzed in comparison to subtype B sequences from 4,769 persons. The non-subtype-B sequences included 461 with subtype A, 1,185 with C, 331 with D, 245 with F, 293 with G, 513 with CRF01_AE, and 618 with CRF02_AG. Each of the 55 known subtype B drug-resistance mutations occurred in at least one non-B isolate, and 44 (80%) of these mutations were significantly associated with antiretroviral treatment in at least one non-B subtype. Conversely, of 67 mutations found to be associated with antiretroviral therapy in at least one non-B subtype, 61 were also associated with antiretroviral therapy in subtype B isolates.Global surveillance and genotypic assessment of drug resistance should focus primarily on the known subtype B drug-resistance mutations.