Virus Dataset Sample Info

> Dataset: 23044036 Search Result


Summary
Item Summary
Project 23044036
Virus Name HIV
Sample Number 35
Disease HIV-1 infection
Country Djiboutian

Sample
ID Sample ID Age Gender Origin Detail
1 1 M Djiboutian View
2 2 M Djiboutian View
3 3 F Djiboutian View
4 4 M Djiboutian View
5 5 F Djiboutian View
6 6 F Djiboutian View
7 7 F Djiboutian View
8 8 F Djiboutian View
9 9 M Djiboutian View
10 10 M Djiboutian View
11 11 M Djiboutian View
12 12 F Djiboutian View
13 13 F Djiboutian View
14 14 M Djiboutian View
15 15 F Djiboutian View
16 16 M Djiboutian View
17 17 F Djiboutian View
18 18 F Djiboutian View
19 19 F Djiboutian View
20 20 F Djiboutian View
21 21 M Djiboutian View
22 22 F Djiboutian View
23 23 M Djiboutian View
24 24 F Djiboutian View
25 25 F Djiboutian View
26 26 F Djiboutian View
27 27 M Djiboutian View
28 28 M Djiboutian View
29 29 F Djiboutian View
30 30 F Djiboutian View
31 31 F Djiboutian View
32 32 M Djiboutian View
33 33 M Djiboutian View
34 34 F Djiboutian View
35 35 M Djiboutian View

Literature
Item Summary
PMID 23044036
Title HIV-1 drug resistance genotyping from antiretroviral therapy (ART) naive and first-line treatment failures in Djiboutian patients.
Abstract UNLABELLED: In this study we report the prevalence of antiretroviral drug resistant HIV-1 genotypes of virus isolated from Djiboutian patients who failed first-line antiretroviral therapy (ART) and from ART naive patients. PATIENTS AND METHODS: A total of 35 blood samples from 16 patients who showed first-line ART failure (>1000 viral genome copies/ml) and 19 ART-naive patients were collected in Djibouti from October 2009 to December 2009. Both the protease (PR) and reverse transcriptase (RT) genes were amplified and sequenced using National Agency for AIDS Research (ANRS) protocols. The Stanford HIV database algorithm was used for interpretation of resistance data and genotyping. RESULTS: Among the 16 patients with first-line ART failure, nine (56.2%) showed reverse transcriptase inhibitor-resistant HIV-1 strains: two (12.5%) were resistant to nucleoside (NRTI), one (6.25%) to non-nucleoside (NNRTI) reverse transcriptase inhibitors, and six (37.5%) to both. Analysis of the DNA sequencing data indicated that the most common mutations conferring drug resistance were M184V (38%) for NRTI and K103N (25%) for NNRTI. Only NRTI primary mutations K101Q, K103N and the PI minor mutation L10V were found in ART naive individuals. No protease inhibitor resistant strains were detected. In our study, we found no detectable resistance in approximately 44% of all patients who experienced therapeutic failure which was explained by low compliance, co-infection with tuberculosis and malnutrition. Genotyping revealed that 65.7% of samples were infected with subtype C, 20% with CRF02_AG, 8.5% with B, 2.9% with CRF02_AG/C and 2.9% with K/C. CONCLUSION: The results of this first study about drug resistance mutations in first-line ART failures show the importance of performing drug resistance mutation test which guides the choice of a second-line regimen. This will improve the management of HIV-infected Djiboutian patients. VIRTUAL SLIDES: The virtual slide(s) for this article can be found here: http://www.diagnosticpathology.diagnomx.eu/vs/2051206212753973.