Scientific Reports (Oct 2018)

Previous antiretroviral drug use compromises standard first-line HIV therapy and is mediated through drug-resistance

  • Seth C. Inzaule,
  • Cissy M. Kityo,
  • Margaret Siwale,
  • Alani Sulaimon Akanmu,
  • Maureen Wellington,
  • Marleen de Jager,
  • Prudence Ive,
  • Kishor Mandaliya,
  • Wendy Stevens,
  • T. Sonia Boender,
  • Pascale Ondoa,
  • Kim C. E. Sigaloff,
  • Denise Naniche,
  • Tobias F. Rinke de Wit,
  • Raph L. Hamers

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-018-33538-0
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 8, no. 1
pp. 1 – 7

Abstract

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Abstract In ART programs in sub-Saharan Africa, a growing proportion of HIV-infected persons initiating first-line antiretroviral therapy (ART) have a history of prior antiretroviral drug use (PAU). We assessed the effect of PAU on the risk of pre-treatment drug resistance (PDR) and virological failure (VF) in a multicountry cohort of HIV-infected adults initiated on a standard non-nucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitor (NNRTI)-based first-line ART. Multivariate logistic regression was used to assess the associations between PAU, PDR and VF (defined as viral load ≥400 cps/mL). Causal mediation analysis was used to assess the proportion of the effect of PAU on VF that could be eliminated by intervening on PDR. Of 2737 participants, 122 (4.5%) had a history of PAU. Participants with PAU had a 7.2-fold (95% CI 4.4–11.7) risk of carrying PDR and a 3.1-fold (95% CI 1.6–6.1) increased risk of VF, compared to antiretroviral-naïve participants. Controlling for PDR would eliminate nearly half the effect of PAU on the risk of VF. Patients with a history of PAU are at increased risk of ART failure, which is to a large extent attributable to PDR. These findings support the recent WHO recommendations for use of differentiated, non-NNRTI-based empiric first-line therapy in patients with PAU.

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