Background: The impact of drug resistance mutational load and APOBEC editing in heavily treatment-experienced (HTE) people living with multidrug-resistant HIV has not been investigated. Material and Methods: This study explored the HIV-DNA and HIV-RNA mutational load of drug resistance and APOBEC-related mutations through next-generation sequencing (NGS, Illumina MiSeq) in 20 failing HTE participants enrolled in the PRESTIGIO registry. Results: The patients showed high levels of both HIV-DNA (4.5 [4.0–5.2] log10 copies/106 T-CD4+ cell) and HIV-RNA (4.5 [4.1–5.0] log10 copies/mL) with complex resistance patterns in both compartments. Among the 255 drug-resistant mutations found, 66.3% were concordantly detected in both HIV-DNA and HIV-RNA; 71.3% of mutations were already present in historical Sanger genotypes. At an intra-patient frequency > 5%, a considerable proportion of mutations detected through DNA-NGS were found in historical genotypes but not through RNA-NGS, and few patients had APOBEC-related mutations. Of 14 patients who switched therapy, the five who failed treatment had DNA resistance with higher intra-patient frequency and higher DNA/RNA mutational load in a context of tendentially less pronounced APOBEC editing compared with those who responded. Conclusions: Using NGS in HIV-DNA and HIV-RNA together with APOBEC editing evaluation might help to identify HTE individuals with MDR who are more prone to experience virological failure.

Viral resistance burden and APOBEC editing correlate with virological response in heavily treatment-experienced people living with multi-drug resistant HIV / Armenia, D.; Santoro, M. M.; Bellocchi, M. C.; Carioti, L.; Galli, L.; Galli, A.; Scutari, R.; Salsi, E.; Mussini, C.; Sterrantino, G.; Calza, L.; Rossetti, B.; Zazzi, M.; Castagna, A.. - In: INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF ANTIMICROBIAL AGENTS. - ISSN 0924-8579. - 59:1(2022), p. 106492. [10.1016/j.ijantimicag.2021.106492]

Viral resistance burden and APOBEC editing correlate with virological response in heavily treatment-experienced people living with multi-drug resistant HIV

Castagna A.
2022-01-01

Abstract

Background: The impact of drug resistance mutational load and APOBEC editing in heavily treatment-experienced (HTE) people living with multidrug-resistant HIV has not been investigated. Material and Methods: This study explored the HIV-DNA and HIV-RNA mutational load of drug resistance and APOBEC-related mutations through next-generation sequencing (NGS, Illumina MiSeq) in 20 failing HTE participants enrolled in the PRESTIGIO registry. Results: The patients showed high levels of both HIV-DNA (4.5 [4.0–5.2] log10 copies/106 T-CD4+ cell) and HIV-RNA (4.5 [4.1–5.0] log10 copies/mL) with complex resistance patterns in both compartments. Among the 255 drug-resistant mutations found, 66.3% were concordantly detected in both HIV-DNA and HIV-RNA; 71.3% of mutations were already present in historical Sanger genotypes. At an intra-patient frequency > 5%, a considerable proportion of mutations detected through DNA-NGS were found in historical genotypes but not through RNA-NGS, and few patients had APOBEC-related mutations. Of 14 patients who switched therapy, the five who failed treatment had DNA resistance with higher intra-patient frequency and higher DNA/RNA mutational load in a context of tendentially less pronounced APOBEC editing compared with those who responded. Conclusions: Using NGS in HIV-DNA and HIV-RNA together with APOBEC editing evaluation might help to identify HTE individuals with MDR who are more prone to experience virological failure.
2022
APOBEC editing
Heavily treatment-experienced people
HIV
Multidrug resistance
Mutational load
Next-generation sequencing
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11768/125128
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