Dissemin is shutting down on January 1st, 2025

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Oxford University Press, Journal of Antimicrobial Chemotherapy, 12(75), p. 3517-3524, 2020

DOI: 10.1093/jac/dkaa349

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Primary resistance to integrase strand transfer inhibitors in Spain using ultrasensitive HIV-1 genotyping

Journal article published in 2020 by M. Casadellà, J. R. Santos ORCID, R. Micán-Rivera, M. Noguera-Julian, J. Portilla, P. Domingo ORCID, A. Antela, J. Sanz, P. Carmona-Oyaga, M. Montero-Alonso, J. Navarro ORCID, José R. Santos, Isabel Bravo, Anna Chamorro, M. Masiá ORCID and other authors.
This paper is made freely available by the publisher.
This paper is made freely available by the publisher.

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Data provided by SHERPA/RoMEO

Abstract

AbstractBackgroundTransmission of resistance mutations to integrase strand transfer inhibitors (INSTIs) in HIV-infected patients may compromise the efficacy of first-line antiretroviral regimens currently recommended worldwide. Continued surveillance of transmitted drug resistance (TDR) is thus warranted.ObjectivesWe evaluated the rates and effects on virological outcomes of TDR in a 96 week prospective multicentre cohort study of ART-naive HIV-1-infected subjects initiating INSTI-based ART in Spain between April 2015 and December 2016.MethodsPre-ART plasma samples were genotyped for integrase, protease and reverse transcriptase resistance using Sanger population sequencing or MiSeq™ using a ≥ 20% mutant sensitivity cut-off. Those present at 1%–19% of the virus population were considered to be low-frequency variants.ResultsFrom a total of 214 available samples, 173 (80.8%), 210 (98.1%) and 214 (100.0%) were successfully amplified for integrase, reverse transcriptase and protease genes, respectively. Using a Sanger-like cut-off, the overall prevalence of any TDR, INSTI-, NRTI-, NNRTI- and protease inhibitor (PI)-associated mutations was 13.1%, 1.7%, 3.8%, 7.1% and 0.9%, respectively. Only three (1.7%) subjects had INSTI TDR (R263K, E138K and G163R), while minority variants with integrase TDR were detected in 9.6% of subjects. There were no virological failures during 96 weeks of follow-up in subjects harbouring TDR as majority variants.ConclusionsTransmitted INSTI resistance remains rare in Spain and, to date, is not associated with virological failure to first-line INSTI-based regimens.