HIV RESISTANCE TO ANTIRETROVIRAL DRUGS: MECHANISMS, GENOTYPIC AND PHENOTYPIC RESISTANCE TESTING IN CLINICAL PRACTICE
- 1 August 2002
- journal article
- review article
- Published by Taylor & Francis in Acta Clinica Belgica
- Vol. 57 (4) , 191-201
- https://doi.org/10.1179/acb.2002.041
Abstract
HIV resistance to antiretroviral agents is a major contributory cause of treatment failure. The dynamics of HIV replication, together with patient-, physician-, and drug-related factors, lead to emergence of HIV resistant strains in most of the patients. Phenotypic assays look for an increase in the antiretroviral drug (ARV) concentration that inhibits 50% of the growth of the tested HIV strain (IC50), comparatively with a reference strain cultivated in parallel. Genotypic tests detect resistance mutations in the reverse transcriptase and protease genes by comparing the gene sequences of a resistant virus to those of a wildtype strain that has previously been described. The efficacy of each ARV class and each individual ARV is threatened by specific mutations and resistance mechanisms. In retrospective studies of genotypic or phenotypic resistance testing, baseline resistance tests results were correlated with virological outcomes. There is some evidence from prospective studies that resistance testing may have some benefits when used to choose salvage regimens. However, problems in the areas of test interpretation, patient compliance, availability of active drugs, and technical test performance limit the usefulness of resistance testing in clinical practice. This article reviews the mechanisms underlying HIV resistance, the principles of phenotypic and genotypic tests, and the use of these tests in clinical practice.Keywords
This publication has 31 references indexed in Scilit:
- Les multiples aspects de la résistance du VIH aux antirétrovirauxMedecine Et Maladies Infectieuses, 2000
- British HIV Association (BHIVA) guidelines for the treatment of HIV-infected adults with antiretroviral therapyHIV Medicine, 2000
- Efavirenz plus Zidovudine and Lamivudine, Efavirenz plus Indinavir, and Indinavir plus Zidovudine and Lamivudine in the Treatment of HIV-1 Infection in AdultsNew England Journal of Medicine, 1999
- Insertion of two animo acids combined with changes in reverse transcriptase containing tyrosine-215 of HIV-1 resistant to multiple nucleoside analogsAIDS, 1999
- The implications of drug resistance for strategies of combination antiviral chemotherapyAntiviral Research, 1996
- In vivo emergence of HIV-1 variants resistant to multiple protease inhibitorsNature, 1995
- Zidovudine treatment results in the selection of human immunodeficiency virus type 1 variants whose genotypes confer increasing levels of drug resistanceJournal of General Virology, 1994
- Resistance to ddI and Sensitivity to AZT Induced by a Mutation in HIV-1 Reverse TranscriptaseScience, 1991
- Multiple Mutations in HIV-1 Reverse Transcriptase Confer High-Level Resistance to Zidovudine (AZT)Science, 1989
- Genetic variation in AIDS virusesCell, 1986