Journal of the International Association of Providers of AIDS Care (Dec 2024)

Plasma Viral Load of 200 Copies/mL is a Suitable Threshold to Define Viral Suppression and HIV Drug Resistance Testing in Low- and Middle-Income Countries: Evidence From a Facility-Based Study in Cameroon

  • Collins Ambe Chenwi MD, MSc,
  • Rachel Audrey Nayang Mundo MSc,
  • Alex Durand Nka MSc, PhD,
  • Ezechiel Ngoufack Jagni Semengue MSc, PhD,
  • Grâce Angong Beloumou MSc,
  • Aude Christelle Ka’e MSc, PhD,
  • Willy Leroi Togna Pabo MSc,
  • Désiré Takou MSc,
  • Aissatou Abba MSc,
  • Sandrine Claire Djupsa MSc,
  • Evariste Molimbou MSc,
  • Naomi-karell Etame MSc,
  • Aurelie Minelle Kengni Ngueko MSc,
  • David Kob Same MD, MPH,
  • Jolle Nounouce Bouba Pamen MSc, PhD,
  • Aristide Stephane Abah Abah MD, MPH,
  • Serge Clotaire Billong MD,
  • Rogers Ajeh Awoh MPH, PhD,
  • Gregory Edie Halle-Ekane MD,
  • Giulia Cappelli MSc, PhD,
  • Anne-Esther Njom-Nlend MD,
  • Anne-Cecile ZK Bissek MD,
  • Elvis Temfack MD, PhD,
  • Maria Mercedes Santoro MSc, PhD,
  • Francesca Ceccherini-Silberstein MSc, PhD,
  • Vittorio Colizzi MD, PhD,
  • Jean Kaseya MD, MPH,
  • Nicaise Ndembi MSc, PhD,
  • Alexis Ndjolo MD,
  • Carlo Federico Perno MD, PhD,
  • Joseph Fokam MSc, PhD, PGD

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1177/23259582241306484
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 23

Abstract

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Introduction In low-and-middle-income-countries (LMIC), viral suppression is defined as plasma viral load (PVL) below 1000 copies/mL (low-level viremia [LLV]) and threshold for HIV drug resistance (HIVDR) testing. However, there is evidence that drug resistance mutations (DRMs) may emerge at LLV, thus compromising antiretroviral treatment (ART) response . We evaluated sequencing success rates (SSR) at LLV, described HIVDR profiles and adequacy with potential efficacy of tenofovir-lamivudine-dolutegravir (TLD). Methods A cross-sectional study was conducted among individuals with LLV at the Chantal BIYA International Reference Centre, Yaoundé, Cameroon from January 2020 through August 2021. HIV-1 sequencing was performed on protease/reverse-transcriptase, and sequences analysed using Stanford HIVdbv9.5. SSR and HIVDR rates were assessed according to viral-load ranges, with P < .05 considered statistically significant. Results In total, 131 individuals were enrolled (median [IQR] age = 41 [30−49] years; 67.9% female; 54.7% at WHO clinical-stage I/II; median ART-duration 7 [4−11] years; median CD4-count 221 [103−402] cells/mm 3 and median PVL 222 [96−436] copies/mL). Overall, SSR at LLV was 34.4% (45/131) and increased significantly with decreasing-age ( P = .002) and increasing-PVL ( P = .017). SSR were doubled at PVL≥150 copies/mL (21.8% at [40−150] vs. 43.3% at [150−1000]; OR = 2.8, P = .01). Of the 45 sequences obtained, 75.6% were recombinant strains (CRF02_AG, CRF09_cpx, CRF11_cpx) and 24.4% pure-subtypes (A1, D, F2, G). Overall, HIVDR prevalence at LLV was 82.2% (37/45), with 74.6% and 15.6% resistance to reverse-transcriptase inhibitors (RTIs) and ritonavir-boosted protease inhibitors (PI/r) respectively. Interestingly, HIVDR rates were similar at PVLs [50−200] versus [200−1000] copies/mL ( P = .69). The most frequent DRMs were M184 V (73.3%) and K103N (40.0%) for RTIs and M46I (6.7%) for PIs/r. Overall 55.6% (25/45) of individuals were on suboptimal ART (needing ART-optimisation), with 48.9% (22/45) having suboptimal TLD predictive efficacy. Optimisation need was higher in first-line (81.8%, P = .03), but similar across viral clades and PVL-ranges ( P = .6). Conclusion In this LMIC context, sequencing for HIVDR is feasible at LLV even with broad HIV-1 diversity, with significantly higher SSR above 150 copies/mL and/or in paediatrics. About 80% of individuals with LLV harbour HIVDR strains, with half of them needing ART optimisations to limit HIVDR emergence and prevent treatment failure. Our findings underscore the clinical benefits of HIVDR during persisting LLV and the need to reconsider the threshold for viral suppression around 200copies/mL in LMICs.