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Long-term
Virological Effect of HAART on Cerebrospinal Fluid and Relationship
with Genotypic Resistance
The
objective of this study was to assess the long-term virological response
in cerebrospinal
fluid (CSF) in patients treated with HAART and to
compare this response to CSF and plasma HIV drug
resistance profiles.
Paired
CSF and plasma specimens were drawn from 18 patients receiving HAART
at baseline and after 9 to 70 months of therapy.
Results
At
baseline, median HIV-1 RNA concentrations were 4.13 log10 copies/ml
in CSF and 5.31 log10 copies/ml in plasma.
At
the time of on-therapy CSF sampling, HIV-1 RNA was undetectable
in CSF from 13/18 patients (72%), and in plasma from 9/18 patients
(50%).
The
genotypic analysis at baseline revealed reverse transcriptase (RT)
resistance mutations in 7 of 11 (64%) CSF samples and in 8 of 11
(73%) plasma samples.
No
patient had protease resistance mutations, except for secondary
mutations.
At
the time of virological
failure in CSF, new RT and protease resistance mutations
were found in both CSF and plasma of the two patients with both
baseline and on-treatment paired evaluations.
At
long-term follow-up, the proportion of patients failing to respond
virologically was lower in CSF than in plasma.
The
authors conclude, “Virological failure in CSF was associated with
failure to respond in plasma and onset of new drug resistance mutations
in both compartments.”
Clinic
of Infectious Diseases, San Raffaele Hospital, Milano, Italy.
10/18/04
Reference
A
Bestetti and others. Long-term virological effect of highly active antiretroviral
therapy on cerebrospinal fluid and relationship with genotypic resistance.
Journal of Neurovirology
10 (Suppl 1): 52-57. 2004.
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