AI Article Synopsis

  • - The study compared Sanger sequencing and next-generation sequencing (NGS) to detect drug-resistance mutations in HIV-1 among treatment-naive patients in Ghana, aiming to find minority mutations that could lead to treatment failure.
  • - NGS identified 25 mutations in the HIV genes compared to 21 by Sanger sequencing, revealing a higher detection rate of minority drug resistance mutations (55% vs. 35%).
  • - Results suggest NGS is more effective for accurate drug resistance testing and highlight the need for its implementation in clinical settings in Ghana, as Sanger sequencing alone may miss significant mutations.

Article Abstract

Background: The successful detection of drug-resistance mutations (DRMs) in HIV-1 infected patients has improved the management of HIV infection. Next-generation sequencing (NGS) to detect low-frequency mutations is predicted to be useful for efficiently testing minority drug resistance mutations, which could contribute to virological failure. This study employed Sanger sequencing and NGS to detect and compare minority and majority drug resistance mutations in HIV-1 strains in treatment-naive patients from Ghana.

Method: From a previous study, 20 antiretroviral therapy (ART)-naive participants were selected for a cross-sectional study. Sanger sequencing and NGS techniques were used to detect the majority and minority HIV drug resistance (HIVDR) mutations, respectively, in the protease (PR) and partial reverse transcriptase (RT) genes. NGS detected mutations at 1 % and 5 % frequencies and Sanger sequencing at ≥20 % frequencies. The sequences obtained from NGS and Sanger sequencing platforms were submitted to the Stanford HIV drug resistance database for subtyping, mutation identification, and interpretations.

Results: Sequences from the twenty participants where the CRF02_AG was the predominant strain (16, 80 %) were analyzed. NGS detected 25 mutations in the RT and PR genes, compared to 21 mutations by Sanger sequencing. Minority DRMs were detected at the prevalence of 55.0 % with NGS against 35 % DRMs by Sanger sequencing. One of the patients had eight different HIVDR variants, with two minority variants. These mutations were directed against PI (K20I and D30DN), NNRTI (Y181C, M23LM and V108I) and NRTI (K65R, M184I, and D67N).

Conclusion: The study affirms the usefulness of genomic sequencing for drug resistance testing in HIV. It further shows that Sanger sequencing alone may not be adequate to detect mutations and that NGS capacity should be developed and deployed in the Ghanaian clinical settings for patients living with HIV.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11253264PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.heliyon.2024.e33180DOI Listing

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