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Natural
Variation of Drug Susceptibility in Wild-type HIV-1
Wild-type viruses from the ViroLogic phenotype-genotype database
were evaluated to determine the upper confidence limit of the drug
susceptibility distributions, or "biological cutoffs,"
for the PhenoSense HIV phenotypic drug susceptibility assay.
Definition of the natural variation in drug susceptibility
in wild-type human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) type 1 isolates
is necessary to determine the prevalence of innate drug resistance
and to assess the capability of the PhenoSense assay to reliably
measure subtle reductions in drug susceptibility.
The biological cutoffs for each drug, defined by the 99th percentile
of the fold change in the 50% inhibitory concentration distributions
or the mean fold change plus 2 standard deviations, were lower than
those previously reported for other phenotypic assays and lower
than the clinically relevant cutoffs previously defined for the
PhenoSense assay.
The 99th percentile fold change values ranged from 1.2 (tenofovir)
to 1.8 (zidovudine) for nucleoside reverse transcriptase RT inhibitors
(RTIs), from 3.0 (efavirenz) to 6.2 (delavirdine) for non nucleoside
RTIs, and from 1.6 (lopinavir) to 3.6 (nelfinavir) for protease
inhibitors.
To evaluate the potential role of intrinsic assay variability
in the observed variations in the drug susceptibilities of wild-type
isolates, 10 reference viruses with different drug susceptibility
patterns were tested 8 to 30 times each.
The median coefficients of variation in fold change for the
reference viruses ranged from 12 to 18% for all drugs except zidovudine
(32%), strongly suggesting that the observed differences in wild-type
virus susceptibility to the different drugs is related to intrinsic
virus variability rather than assay variability.
The authors conclude, “The low biological cutoffs and assay
variability suggest that the PhenoSense HIV assay may assist in
defining clinically relevant susceptibility cutoffs for resistance
to antiretroviral drugs.”
ViroLogic, Inc., South San Francisco, California.
03/24/04
Reference
N
T Parkin and others. Natural variation of drug susceptibility in wild-type human
immunodeficiency virus type 1. Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy
48(2): 437-443. February 2004.
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