AI Article Synopsis

  • 75 HIV-1-infected patients were studied, with 55 switching to an abacavir-based NRTI regimen and virological responses assessed at 6 months.
  • There was a high level of genetic diversity among the patients, with a significant percentage showing mutations in reverse transcriptase and protease that could affect treatment outcomes.
  • After 6 months, the simplified NRTI regimen had mixed results: 22 successes, 10 intermittent viral increases (blips), and 17 failures, whereas the patients continuing the previous regimen had better outcomes with fewer failures.

Article Abstract

Of 75 human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) type 1-infected patients successfully responding to 2 nucleoside reverse-transcriptase inhibitors (NRTIs) plus 1 protease inhibitor (PI), 55 started a simplified abacavir (ABC)-based triple NRTI regimen. Influences of DNA load and DNA reverse-transcriptase (RT) mutations on virological responses were assessed at month 6 after initiation of therapy. Baseline heterogeneity was observed: peripheral blood mononuclear cell (PBMC) genotyping showed 31% RT mutations with 1-5 NRTI-related mutations, 78% protease mutations had 1-5 PI-related mutations; and HIV-1-DNA levels were 1.8-3.5 log(10) copies/10(6) PBMC. Outcomes for 49 patients on a regimen of 2 NRTIs plus ABC were as follows: 22 successes, 10 blips ("blip" defined as intermittent plasma HIV-1 RNA levels between 50 and 100 copies/mL and a return to an undetectable level), and 17 failures, whereas, for patients continuing on a regimen of 2 NRTIs plus 1 PI, there were 19 successes and 1 blip. Previous treatment regimens, baseline provirus level, and PBMC genotype predicted virological outcome.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1086/345860DOI Listing

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