Virological follow-up of adult patients in antiretroviral treatment programmes in sub-Saharan Africa: a systematic review

被引:242
作者
Barth, Roos E. [1 ]
van der Loeff, Maarten F. Schim [2 ,3 ]
Schuurman, Rob [4 ]
Hoepelmon, Andy I. M. [1 ]
Wensing, Annemarie M. J. [4 ]
机构
[1] Univ Med Ctr Utrecht, Dept Internal Med & Infect Dis, NL-3584 CX Utrecht, Netherlands
[2] Publ Hlth Serv, Amsterdam, Netherlands
[3] Univ Amsterdam, Acad Med Ctr, Ctr Infect & Immun Amsterdam, NL-1105 AZ Amsterdam, Netherlands
[4] Univ Med Ctr Utrecht, Dept Virol, Utrecht, Netherlands
关键词
HIV-INFECTED ADULTS; FIXED-DOSE COMBINATION; DRUG-RESISTANCE MUTATIONS; RURAL SOUTH-AFRICA; NAIVE HIV-1-INFECTED ADULTS; WORLD-HEALTH-ORGANIZATION; RESOURCE-LIMITED SETTINGS; REVERSE-TRANSCRIPTASE; BURKINA-FASO; IMMUNOLOGICAL OUTCOMES;
D O I
10.1016/S1473-3099(09)70328-7
中图分类号
R51 [传染病];
学科分类号
100401 ;
摘要
Following large-scale roll-out of antiretroviral therapy in sub-Saharan Africa, the non-clinical efficacy of antiretroviral therapy has received little attention. We aimed to systematically review virological efficacy and drug-resistance outcomes of programmes of antiretroviral therapy in sub-Saharan Africa. 89 studies with heterogeneous design, definitions, and methods were identified. Overall, in on-treatment analysis, 10 351 (78%) of 13 288 patients showed virological suppression after 6 months of antiretroviral therapy, 7413 (76%) of 9794 after 12 months, and 3840 (67%) of 5690 after 24 months. Long-term virological data are scarce. Genotyping results were available for patients with virological failure (HIV-1 RNA greater than 1000 copies per mL). Most patients (839 of 849; 99%) were infected with a non-B HIV-1 subtype. However, drug-resistance patterns were largely similar to those in subtype B Resistance profiles were associated with the antiretroviral drugs commonly used: the lamivudine-associated M184V mutation was most common, followed by K103N which is associated with non-nucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitors. Thymidine-analogue mutations and the K65R mutation were less common. First-line antiretroviral therapy regimens used in sub-Saharan Africa are effective. Profiles of drug resistance suggest that a second-line treatment regimen based on protease inhibitors, with a backbone of nucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitors, is a reasonable option for patients with HIV in sub-Saharan Africa who experience first-line treatment failure.
引用
收藏
页码:155 / 166
页数:12
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