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Emergence of acyclovir-resistant varicella zoster virus in an AIDS patient on prolonged acyclovir therapy
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1990
Year
Prolonged Acyclovir TherapyViral PersistenceViral DiagnosticsPathogenesisAntiviral Drug DevelopmentAntiviral TherapyPathologyVirologySkin LesionsSerial Varicella ZosterInfection ControlHivAids PatientMedicineAntiviral DrugAcyclovir Resistance
We demonstrate for the first time the appearance of acyclovir resistance in serial varicella zoster isolates from a patient treated with acyclovir. We recovered varicella zoster virus three times over a period of 5 months from the skin lesions of this patient with AIDS who was treated with three courses of intravenous acyclovir and prolonged low-dose oral acyclovir. The isolate recovered from a typical zoster lesion before acyclovir, and one obtained from a hyperkeratotic lesion 2 months later, after intravenous and oral acyclovir, were sensitive to acyclovir and produced normal amounts of thymidine kinase. In contrast, virus recovered from lesions 5 months after the onset, when the patient had received repeated courses of acyclovir, was acyclovir-resistant and thymidine-kinase-deficient. Resistance to acyclovir was associated with persistence of lesions which failed to improve with intravenous acyclovir, but was not associated with new lesion formation.