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The investigation of genotypic antiretroviral drug resistance in the context of the South African national antiretroviral roll-out programme
[摘要] ENGLISH ABSTRACT: Introduction: Since the South African public sector antiretroviral roll-out programme started in 2004, the success of antiretroviral combination therapy (cART) has been experienced in terms of survival, prevention of mother-to-child transmission (PMTCT) and quality of life. However, as the programme matures, viral resistance to the constituent drugs will increase. Monitoring antiretroviral drug resistance (ARVDR) should therefore be a priority in the public health approach to HIV treatment.Methods: A cross-sectional investigation of genotypic antiretroviral drug resistance in:a) HIV-infected mothers who were exposed to a PMTCT regimen of short course azidothymidine (AZT) with single dose nevirapine (NVP) during labour.b) HIV-infected adults and children who were cART-naïve (transmitted or initial resistance).c) HIV-infected adults and children who were failing cART (drug-induced or acquired resistance). In case of adults, this includes patients on a first-line, non-nucleoside reverse transcriptase (NNRTI)-based regimen, or on a second-line, protease inhibitor (PI)-based regimen, and in case of children, this includes patients on a first-line PI-based regimen.Results: In mothers who received a PMTCT-regimen that combined AZT and NVP the prevalence of NNRTI resistance mutations was 17.1% (95% CI: 8.7-25.6%).The prevalence of transmitted ARVDR in adults was low, as was initial ARVDR in young children (mostly PMTCT-exposed), except for NNRTI resistance in children who had received NVP as part of PMTCT.Drug-induced resistance was found in adults failing first-line NNRTI-based cART, with 83% having resistance to ≥1 drug. In contrast, adult patients failing second-line PI-based cART had a low prevalence of PI resistance; the predominant reason for failure was poor drug exposure, as detected by measuring lopinavir concentrations in blood plasma and hair samples. In contrast, PI resistance in children was not rare, largely due to historic exposure to un-boosted PIs. This resulted in extensive resistance to PIs and reverse transcriptase inhibitors (RTI) in some children.Conclusions: A combined regimen of short course AZT with intrapartum NVP for PMTCT may, in addition to reducing the risk of neonatal infection, also reduce the risk of NVP resistance in the mothers compared to a regimen of NVP only. In South Africa, the prevalence of transmitted ARVDR remains low relative to industrialised countries, probably as comparatively little time has elapsed since the scale-up of cART. Adults failing first-line cART are likely to respond to second-line cART, without failure due to resistance. However some children with PI and RTI resistance cannot be adequately treated with drugs currently available through the roll-out programme. This emphasizes the urgent need for a rational and science-based approach to managing cART-experienced children, including access to additional drugs to form a third-line paediatric cART regimen.
[发布日期]  [发布机构] Stellenbosch University
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