Superinfection with drug-resistant HIV is rare and does not contribute substantially to therapy failure in a large European cohort.

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Serval ID
serval:BIB_148CAA34EC7C
Type
Article: article from journal or magazin.
Collection
Publications
Institution
Title
Superinfection with drug-resistant HIV is rare and does not contribute substantially to therapy failure in a large European cohort.
Journal
Bmc Infectious Diseases
Author(s)
Bartha I., Assel M., Sloot P.M., Zazzi M., Torti C., Schülter E., Luca A.D., Sönnerborg A., Abecasis A.B., Van Laethem K., Rosi A., Svärd J., Paredes R., van de Vijver D.A., Vandamme A.M., Müller V.
ISSN
1471-2334 (Electronic)
ISSN-L
1471-2334
Publication state
Published
Issued date
2013
Peer-reviewed
Oui
Volume
13
Pages
537
Language
english
Notes
Publication types: Journal Article Publication Status: epublish
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Superinfection with drug resistant HIV strains could potentially contribute to compromised therapy in patients initially infected with drug-sensitive virus and receiving antiretroviral therapy. To investigate the importance of this potential route to drug resistance, we developed a bioinformatics pipeline to detect superinfection from routinely collected genotyping data, and assessed whether superinfection contributed to increased drug resistance in a large European cohort of viremic, drug treated patients.
METHODS: We used sequence data from routine genotypic tests spanning the protease and partial reverse transcriptase regions in the Virolab and EuResist databases that collated data from five European countries. Superinfection was indicated when sequences of a patient failed to cluster together in phylogenetic trees constructed with selected sets of control sequences. A subset of the indicated cases was validated by re-sequencing pol and env regions from the original samples.
RESULTS: 4425 patients had at least two sequences in the database, with a total of 13816 distinct sequence entries (of which 86% belonged to subtype B). We identified 107 patients with phylogenetic evidence for superinfection. In 14 of these cases, we analyzed newly amplified sequences from the original samples for validation purposes: only 2 cases were verified as superinfections in the repeated analyses, the other 12 cases turned out to involve sample or sequence misidentification. Resistance to drugs used at the time of strain replacement did not change in these two patients. A third case could not be validated by re-sequencing, but was supported as superinfection by an intermediate sequence with high degenerate base pair count within the time frame of strain switching. Drug resistance increased in this single patient.
CONCLUSIONS: Routine genotyping data are informative for the detection of HIV superinfection; however, most cases of non-monophyletic clustering in patient phylogenies arise from sample or sequence mix-up rather than from superinfection, which emphasizes the importance of validation. Non-transient superinfection was rare in our mainly treatment experienced cohort, and we found a single case of possible transmitted drug resistance by this route. We therefore conclude that in our large cohort, superinfection with drug resistant HIV did not compromise the efficiency of antiretroviral treatment.
Pubmed
Web of science
Open Access
Yes
Create date
07/02/2014 19:45
Last modification date
20/08/2019 13:43
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