Publication | Open Access
Antiretroviral Drug Resistance in HIV-1–Infected Patients Experiencing Persistent Low-Level Viremia During First-Line Therapy
144
Citations
15
References
2011
Year
Antiretroviral Drug ResistanceFirst-line TherapyImmunologyPersistent Low-level ViremiaPharmacotherapyAntiviral DrugDrug ResistanceViral PersistenceHuman RetrovirusResistance Mutation (Virology)Molecular DiagnosticsPopulation SequencingVirologyChronic Viral InfectionHivAntiretroviral TherapyTreatment And PreventionAntiviral TherapyMedicine
Population sequencing was performed for persons identified with persistent low-level viremia in 2 clinical trials. Persistent low-level viremia (defined as plasma HIV-1 RNA level >50 and <1000 copies/mL in at least 2 determinations over a 24-week period, after at least 24 weeks of antiretroviral therapy) was observed in 65 (5.6%) of 1158 patients at risk. New resistance mutations were detected during persistent low-level viremia in 37% of the 54 evaluable cases. The most common mutations were M184I/V (14 cases), K103N (9), and M230L (3). Detection of new mutations was associated with higher HIV-1 RNA levels during persistent low-level viremia.
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