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High
Baseline Viral Loads and Substantial But Imperfect Levels of Adherence
Are Major Predictors of Antiretroviral Resistance
The objective of this study
was to systematically characterize the incidence
and determinants of antiretroviral
resistance in the HOMER (Highly Active Antiretroviral
Therapy [HAART] Observational Medical Evaluation
and Research) cohort of 1191 HIV-infected, antiretroviral-naive
adults initiating HAART in British Columbia, Canada.
All plasma samples with plasma
virus loads (pVLs) >1000 copies/mL collected during
the first 30 months of follow-up were genotyped
for drug resistance.
The primary outcome measure
was time to the first detection of major drug-resistance
mutation(s). Cox proportional hazard regression
was used to identify factors significantly associated
with the detection of drug-resistance mutations.
Results
Drug-resistance
mutations were detected in 298 subjects
(25%).
Factors significantly associated
with detection of drug-resistance mutations included
high baseline pVL (multivariate hazard ratio [HR],
1.59; P < .001) and adherence (estimated
using prescription-refill data and/or untimed plasma
drug-concentration measurements).
When compared with subjects with
low (0% - <20%) prescription-refill percentages, subjects
at an elevated risk of harboring drug-resistance
mutations were those with relatively high but imperfect
prescription-refill percentages (80% - <90%; multivariate
HR, 4.15; P < .001) and those with
essentially perfect ( 95%)
refill percentages but with 2 plasma drug concentrations
below the steady-state trough concentration minus
1 standard deviation (multivariate HR, 4.57; P
< .001).
Initial use of non
nucleoside reverse-transcriptase inhibitor-based HAART
was significantly associated with multi-class
drug resistance (multivariate HR, 1.84; P
= .001).
The authors conclude, “High baseline pVLs and substantial but imperfect
levels of adherence
were major predictors of antiretroviral resistance.
British
Columbia Centre for Excellence
in HIV/AIDS, and Department
of Medicine, University of
British Columbia, Vancouver, Canada.
01/31/05
Reference
P R Harrigan
and others. Predictors of
HIV Drug-Resistance Mutations in
a Large Antiretroviral-Naive Cohort
Initiating Triple Antiretroviral
Therapy. Journal of Infectious Diseases 191(3): 339-347.
February 1, 2005.
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