AI Article Synopsis

  • The implementation of highly active anti-retroviral therapy (HAART) has improved the survival rates of HIV/AIDS patients in Korea, but the emergence of drug-resistant strains highlights the need for new treatments.
  • Integrase inhibitors (INIs), approved by the FDA in 2007, are being introduced in Korea, making it crucial to identify existing drug-resistant mutations before their use.
  • A study of 75 newly diagnosed Korean HIV-1 patients revealed few minor mutations in the integrase gene, with no major mutations detected, indicating that INIs are likely to be effective in treatment-naïve patients.

Article Abstract

The survival time of HIV/AIDS patients in Korea has increased since HAART (highly active anti-retroviral therapy) was introduced. However, the occurrence of drug-resistant strains requires new anti-retroviral drugs, one of which, an integrase inhibitor (INI), was approved by the US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) in 2007. INIs have been used for therapy in many countries and are about to be employed in Korea. Therefore, it is important to identify basic mutant variants prior to the introduction of INIs in order to estimate their efficacy. To monitor potential drug-resistant INI mutations in Korean HIV/AIDS patients, the polymorphism of the int gene was investigated together with the pol gene using a genotypic assay for 75 randomly selected Korean HIV-1 patients newly diagnosed in 2007. The drug-resistant mutation sequences were analysed using the Stanford HIV DB and the International AIDS Society resistance testing-USA panel (IAS-USA). Seventy strains of Korean subtype B were compared with foreign subtype-B strains, and there were no significantly different variants of the int gene region in the study population. Major mutation sites in the integrase (E92Q, F121Y, G140A/S, Y143C/R, Q148H/R/K and N155H) were not detected, and only a few minor mutation sites (L74M, V151I, E157Q, V165I, I203M, S230N and D232N) were identified in 21 strains (28%). Resistance due to mutations in the pol gene was observed in a single strain (1.3%) resistant to protease inhibitors (PIs) and in four strains (5.3%) resistant to reverse transcriptase inhibitors (RTIs). In summary, this demonstrates that INIs will be susceptible to drug naïve HIV/AIDS patients in Korea.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.1469-0691.2010.03392.xDOI Listing

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