International Journal of Infectious Diseases (Jun 2020)

High rates of tenofovir failure in a CRF01_AE-predominant HIV epidemic in the Philippines

  • Edsel Maurice T. Salvana,
  • Genesis May J. Samonte,
  • Elizabeth Telan,
  • Katerina Leyritana,
  • Rosario Jessica Tactacan-Abrenica,
  • Patrick R. Ching,
  • Geraldine M. Arevalo,
  • Niña Theresa Dungca,
  • Christine Peñalosa-Ramos,
  • Kevin Anthony R. Mendoza,
  • Lyka F. Trinidad,
  • Angelo dela Tonga,
  • Jodor Lim,
  • Raul Destura,
  • Marissa Alejandria,
  • Rontgene Solante,
  • Lalaine Arcangel,
  • Noel S. Palaypayon,
  • Brian E. Schwem

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 95
pp. 125 – 132

Abstract

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Background: The Philippines has the fastest growing HIV epidemic in the Asia-Pacific. This increase was accompanied by a shift in the predominant HIV subtype from B to CRF01_AE. Increasing evidence points to a difference in treatment responses between subtypes. We examined treatment failure and acquired drug resistance (ADR) in people living with HIV (PLHIVs) after one year on antiretrovirals (ARVs). Methods: PLHIV maintained on ARVs for one year were recruited. Treatment failure was defined as a viral load of ≥1000 copies/mL. Sanger sequencing for genotyping and drug resistance mutation (DRM) detection was performed on patients failing treatment. Results: 513 PLHIV were enrolled. The most common antiretroviral regimens were TDF+3TC + EFV (269) and AZT+3TC + EFV (155). 53 (10.3%) subjects failed treatment. Among these, 48 (90.6%) had DRMs, 84.9% were subtype CRF01_AE. Tenofovir-based regimens performed worse than zidovudine-based regimens (OR 3.28, 95% CI 1.58–7.52 p < 0.001). Higher rates of NRTI, NNRTI, K65R tenofovir resistance, and multi-class resistance were found compared to those reported in literature. Conclusions: HIV treatment failure at one year of treatment in the Philippines is 10.3%. We found unusually high tenofovir and multiclass resistance, and optimal ARV regimens may need to be reevaluated for CRF01_AE-predominant epidemics.

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