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Intermittent
HIV Viremia (Blips) in HAART Patients Are Not Clinically Significant
Many
patients infected with HIV-1 and receiving HAART experience intermittent
episodes of detectable
viremia ("blips"), which may raise
concerns about drug
resistance, lead to costly repeat measurements
of viral RNA, and sometimes trigger alterations
in therapy.
The
aim of the current study was to test the hypothesis that blips represent
random biological and statistical variation around mean steady-state
HIV-1 RNA levels slightly below 50 copies/mL rather than biologically
significant elevations in viremia.
Between
June 19, 2003, and February 9, 2004, patients receiving
therapy underwent intensive sampling (every 2-3 days)
over 3 to 4 months to define the frequency, magnitude,
and duration of blips and their association with drug
levels and other clinical variables.
Blips
were defined as HIV-1 RNA measurements greater than or
equal to 50 copies/mL preceded and followed by measurements
less than 50 copies/mL without a change in treatment.
To
determine whether blips result from or lead to drug resistance,
an ultrasensitive genotyping assay
was used to detect drug resistance mutations before, during,
and after blips.
Patients
were 10 HIV-1–infected asymptomatic adults recruited
by clinicians and followed up in the Moore Clinic at
the Johns Hopkins Hospital. Patients had suppression of
viremia to below 50 copies/mL while receiving a stable antiretroviral
regimen for 6 months or longer.
At
each time point, plasma HIV-1 RNA levels were measured
in 2 independent laboratories and drug resistance mutations
were analyzed by clonal sequencing.
Results
With
the intensive sampling, blips were detected in 9 of 10
patients. Statistical analysis was consistent with random
assay variation around a mean viral load below 50 copies/mL.
Blips
were not concordant on independent testing and had a short
duration (median, <3 days) and low magnitude (median, 79
copies/mL).
Blip
frequency was not associated with demographic, clinical,
or treatment variables. Blips did not occur in relation to
illness, vaccination, or directly measured antiretroviral drug
concentrations.
Blips
were marginally associated (P = .08) with
reported episodes of non adherence. Most importantly, in approximately
1000 independent clones sequenced for both protease and
reverse transcriptase, no new resistance mutations were seen
before, during, or shortly after blips.
Conclusion
Most
blips in this population appear to represent random biological
and statistical variation around mean HIV-1 levels below
50 copies/mL rather than clinically significant elevations
in viremia.
Moore
Clinic, Johns Hopkins Hospital, Baltimore, MD.
02/18/05
Reference
R
E Nettles and others. Intermittent HIV-1 Viremia (Blips)
and Drug Resistance in Patients Receiving HAART. Journal
of the American Medical Association 293(7): 817-829. 2005. February
16, 2005.
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