BMC Infectious Diseases (Dec 2012)

Virologic versus immunologic monitoring and the rate of accumulated genotypic resistance to first-line antiretroviral drugs in Uganda

  • Reynolds Steven J,
  • Sendagire Hakim,
  • Newell Kevin,
  • Castelnuovo Barbara,
  • Nankya Immaculate,
  • Kamya Moses,
  • Quinn Thomas C,
  • Manabe Yukari C,
  • Kambugu Andrew

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/1471-2334-12-381
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 12, no. 1
p. 381

Abstract

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Abstract Background Viral load monitoring (VLM) to identify individuals failing antiretroviral therapy (ART) is not widely available in resource-limited settings. We compared the genotypic resistance patterns between clients with VLM versus immunological monitoring (IM). Methods Between 2004–2008, 559 ART naïve clients were enrolled in a prospective cohort, initiated on ART, and monitored with viral load (VL) and CD4+ cell counts every 6 months (VLM group). From February 2008 through June 2009, 998 clients on ART for 36–40 months (corresponding to the follow-up time of the VLM group) at the same clinic and monitored with CD4+ cell counts every 6 months were recruited into a cross sectional study (IM group). Samples from VLM clients at 12, 24 and 36 months and IM clients at 36–40 months with VL > 2000 copies/ml underwent genotypic drug resistance testing. Results Baseline characteristics were similar. Virologic failure (VL > 400 copies/ml) at 12, 24 and 36 months in the VLM group were 12%, 6% and 8% respectively, and in the IM group 10% at 36–40 months. Samples from 39 VLM and 70 IM clients were genotyped. 23/39 (59%) clients in the VLM group (at 12, 24 or 36 months) compared to 63/70 (90%) in the IM group, (P P (P 0.0001). Conclusions Routine VL monitoring reduced the rate of accumulated genotypic resistance to commonly used ART in Uganda.

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