AI Article Synopsis

  • The study aims to compare the prevalence of drug resistance mutations in patients infected with non-B HIV-1 variants versus those with HIV-1 subtype B, using genetic sequencing and analysis.
  • Findings show that certain resistance mutations (like M41L, L210W, T215Y) are less common in non-B variants, particularly subtypes A, C, F, and CRF06_cpx, leading to lower levels of resistance to the drug zidovudine.
  • Overall, the research concludes that the genetic diversity among HIV-1 strains does not significantly impact the development of resistance to antiretroviral medications.

Article Abstract

Objective: To compare the prevalence of mutations associated with resistance to antiretroviral drugs and their interpretation in patients infected with non-B HIV-1 variants versus HIV-1subtype B-infected patients with similar treatment regimens.

Methods: The reverse transcriptase (RT) and protease genes of HIV-1 were sequenced, and subtypes were determined by phylogenetic analysis. Each sequence belonging to a non-B variant was matched with a sequence belonging to subtype B. Patterns of resistance mutations were interpreted in terms of drug resistance using the HIV db algorithm.

Results: RT mutations M41L, L210W, and, to a lesser extent, T215Y were less prevalent in patients infected with non-B variants. This lower prevalence was associated with subtypes A (A1/A2), C, F (F1/F2), and CRF06_cpx. A lower prevalence of high-level resistance to zidovudine was also observed in patients infected with these HIV-1 variants. In the protease gene, differences between patients infected with B or non-B strains were mainly observed for mutations playing a minor role in drug resistance and known to occur mainly as a natural polymorphism in non-B strains: K20R/M/I, M36I, L63P, A71V/T, and V77I. Interpretation of genotypes using the HIV db algorithm indicated that resistance to saquinavir, ritonavir, indinavir, and amprenavir was more frequently a high-level resistance for subtype B and an intermediate-level resistance for non-B variants, but this difference was only significant for amprenavir.

Conclusion: Our results suggest that the genetic diversity of HIV-1 does not play a major role in the development of resistance to antiretroviral drugs.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1097/00126334-200404010-00001DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

patients infected
24
infected non-b
16
drug resistance
12
hiv-1 variants
12
resistance
10
resistance mutations
8
interpretation patients
8
non-b hiv-1
8
infected hiv-1
8
resistance antiretroviral
8

Similar Publications

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!