Virologic Correlates of Adherence to Antiretroviral Medications and Therapeutic Failure
- 1 December 2002
- journal article
- review article
- Published by Wolters Kluwer Health in JAIDS Journal of Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndromes
- Vol. 31, S118-S122
- https://doi.org/10.1097/00126334-200212153-00006
Abstract
Adherence to antiretroviral therapy affects the pharmacokinetics of antiviral drugs and activates a cascade of events ultimately leading to therapeutic success or failure. An optimal adherence usually affords minimal rounds of virus replication and rare spontaneous mutations, which are unable to be fixed in the genome because of the competition of wild-type (more fit) strains. Therefore, adherence-based therapeutic success is mostly accompanied by the prevalence of wild-type strains. In case of poor adherence, virus replication is substantial, and mutations randomly occurring tend to be fixed within the genome. Under these conditions, mutated-resistant strains will outgrow wild-type virus (sensitive to antivirals and thereby unable to compete enough with resistant strains for cellular targets): thus, therapeutic failure occurs, and mutated resistant strains are predominant. In the case of very low or absent adherence, virologic failure occurs, although wild-type virus (whose replication is not significantly affected by antivirals) is not outgrown by mutated strains randomly produced but unable to be fixed within the genome. Taken together, these events and their consequences strongly support the relevance of a tight and continuous monitoring of adherence to antiretroviral drugs to prevent the risk of development of mutated strains often cross-resistant to the majority of antiretroviral drugs currently available.Keywords
This publication has 19 references indexed in Scilit:
- Antiretroviral Treatment for Adult HIV Infection in 2002JAMA, 2002
- Therapeutic drug monitoring in HIV infection: current status and future directionsAIDS, 2002
- Replicative fitness in vivo of HIV-1 variants with multiple drug resistance-associated mutationsJournal of Medical Virology, 2001
- Changes in Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1 Populations after Treatment Interruption in Patients Failing Antiretroviral TherapyJournal of Virology, 2001
- Selection by AZT and Rapid Replacement in the Absence of Drugs of HIV Type 1 Resistant to Multiple Nucleoside AnalogsAIDS Research and Human Retroviruses, 2001
- Therapeutic drug monitoring as a tool in treating HIV infectionAIDS, 2001
- Mechanisms of Virologic Failure in Previously Untreated HIV-Infected Patients From a Trial of Induction-Maintenance TherapyJAMA, 2000
- MRP4: A previously unidentified factor in resistance to nucleoside-based antiviral drugsNature Medicine, 1999
- RNA virus fitnessReviews in Medical Virology, 1997
- Long-Term Exposure to Zidovudine Affectsin Vitroandin Vivothe Efficiency of Phosphorylation of Thymidine KinaseAIDS Research and Human Retroviruses, 1996