Evolution of phenotypic drug susceptibility and viral replication capacity during long-term virologic failure of protease inhibitor therapy in human immunodeficiency virus-infected adults

被引:130
作者
Barbour, JD
Wrin, T
Grant, RM
Martin, JN
Segal, MR
Petropoulos, CJ
Deeks, SG
机构
[1] Univ Calif San Francisco, Dept Med, Gladstone Inst Virol & Immunol, San Francisco, CA USA
[2] San Francisco Gen Hosp, San Francisco, CA 94110 USA
[3] Univ Calif San Francisco, Sch Pharm, Div Biostat, San Francisco, CA 94143 USA
[4] Univ Calif San Francisco, Sch Pharm, Program Biol & Med Informat, Dept Biopharmaceut Sci, San Francisco, CA 94143 USA
[5] Virolog Inc, San Francisco, CA USA
关键词
D O I
10.1128/JVI.76.21.11104-11112.2002
中图分类号
Q93 [微生物学];
学科分类号
071005 ; 100705 ;
摘要
Continued use of antiretroviral therapy despite the emergence of drug-resistant human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) has been associated with the durable maintenance of plasma HIV RNA levels below pretherapy levels. The factors that may account for this partial control of viral replication were assessed in a longitudinal observational study of 20 HIV-infected adults who remained on a stable protease inhibitor-based regimen despite ongoing viral replication (plasma HIV RNA levels consistently >500 copies/ml). Longitudinal plasma samples (n=248) were assayed for drug susceptibility and viral replication capacity (measured by using a single-cycle recombinant-virus assay). The initial treatment-mediated decrease in plasma viremia was directly proportional to the reduction in replicative capacity (P=0.01). Early virologic rebound was associated the emergence of a virus population exhibiting increased protease inhibitor phenotypic resistance, while replicative capacity remained low. During long-term virologic failure, plasma HIV RNA levels often remained stable or increased slowly, while phenotypic resistance continued to increase and replicative capacity decreased slowly. The emergence of primary genotypic mutations within protease (particularly V82A, I84V, and L90M) was temporally associated with increasing phenotypic resistance and decreasing replicative capacity, while the emergence of secondary mutations within protease was associated with more-gradual changes in both phenotypic resistance and replicative capacity. We conclude that HIV may be constrained in its ability to become both highly resistant and highly fit and that this may contribute to the continued partial suppression of plasma HIV RNA levels that is observed in some patients with drug-resistant viremia.
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页码:11104 / 11112
页数:9
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