AI Article Synopsis

  • This study examines the prevalence of HIV drug resistance in pregnant women in Uganda, focusing on those enrolled in the Option B+ clinical trial.
  • Out of 135 women with high viral loads, 23.7% showed resistance mutations, predominantly for NNRTI drugs, which are crucial for antiretroviral therapy.
  • The results emphasize the need for updated treatment guidelines, supporting a shift to dolutegravir-based regimens to improve outcomes for HIV-positive pregnant women.

Article Abstract

Background: Pre-treatment HIV drug resistance is a threat to elimination of mother to child HIV transmission and could lead to virological failure among HIV-positive pregnant women. We analysed genotypic HIV drug resistance (HIVDR) of baseline samples of participants enrolled in the Option B+ clinical trial in Uganda.

Methods: HIV-infected pregnant women attending antenatal care were enrolled from Uganda's National Referral Hospital (Mulago) and Mityana District general hospital and surrounding health centers (HCs). Genotypic HIV testing was performed on blood samples from the first 135 enrolled women out of a subset of 136 participants (25%) who had a baseline VL>1000 copies/mL as one sample failed to amplify.

Results: 159/540 (29.4%) had a VL < 1000 copies/ml and 381/540 (70.6%) had a VL >1,000 copies/ml. Of the women with VL>1000 copies/ml, 32 (23.7%) had resistance mutations including 29/135 (21.5%) NNRTI mutations, 6/135 (4.4%) NRTI mutations and 3/135 (2.2%) had both NNRTI and NRTI mutations. The most common NNRTI resistance mutations were: K103KN (5), K103N (5), V179T (4) and E138A (4).

Conclusions: One quarter of the HIV-infected pregnant women in this trial at baseline had NNRTI genotypic resistance mutations. Our findings support new WHO guidelines for first-line ART that were changed to dolutegravir-based regimens.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10117495PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.4314/ahs.v22i4.48DOI Listing

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