Abstract

abstract IntroductionWhen protease inhibitor (PI)‐based second‐line ART fails, guidelines recommend drug resistance testing and individualized third‐line treatment. However, PI‐resistant viral strains are rare and drug resistance testing is costly. We investigated whether less costly PI‐exposure testing can be used to select those patients who would benefit most from drug resistance testing.MethodsWe performed a retrospective analysis of South African adults living with HIV experiencing failure of ritonavir‐boosted‐lopinavir (LPV/r)‐based second‐line ART for whom drug resistance testing results were available. We included patients who received plasma‐based drug resistance testing at a central South African reference laboratory in 2017 and patients who received dried blood spots (DBS)‐based drug resistance testing at a rural South African clinic between 2009 and 2017. PI‐exposure testing was performed on remnant plasma or DBS using liquid chromatography mass spectrometry (LCMS). Additionally, a low‐cost immunoassay was used on plasma. Population genotypic drug resistance testing of the pol region was performed on plasma and DBS using standard clinical protocols.ResultsSamples from 544 patients (494 plasma samples and 50 DBS) were included. Median age was 41.0 years (IQR: 33.3 to 48.5) and 58.6% were women. Median HIV‐RNA load was 4.9 log10 copies/mL (4.3 to 5.4). Prevalence of resistance to the NRTI‐backbone was 70.6% (349/494) in plasma samples and 56.0% (28/50) in DBS. Major PI‐resistance mutations conferring high‐level resistance to LPV/r were observed in 26.7% (132/494) of plasma samples and 12% (6/50) of DBS. PI‐exposure testing revealed undetectable LPV levels in 47.0% (232/494) of plasma samples and in 60.0% (30/50) of DBS. In pooled analysis of plasma and DBS samples, detectable LPV levels had a sensitivity of 90% (84% to 94%) and a negative predictive failure of 95% (91% to 97%) for the presence of major LPV/r resistance.ConclusionsPI‐exposure testing revealed non‐adherence in half of patients experiencing failure on second‐line ART and accurately predicted the presence or absence of clinically relevant PI resistance. PI‐exposure testing constitutes a novel screening strategy in patients with virological failure of ART that can differentiate between different underlying causes of therapy failure and may allow for more effective use of limited resources available for drug resistance testing.

Highlights

  • When protease inhibitor (PI)-based second-line Antiretroviral treatment (ART) fails, guidelines recommend drug resistance testing and individualized third-line treatment

  • Antiretroviral treatment (ART) programmes are expanding rapidly to people living with HIV in low- and middle-income countries (LMIC) in an effort to control the HIV epidemic

  • We report the accuracy of this novel treatment monitoring strategy on plasma samples as well as on dried blood spots (DBS), the predominant sample types in use for HIV-RNA viral load and HIV drug resistance testing

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Summary

Introduction

When protease inhibitor (PI)-based second-line ART fails, guidelines recommend drug resistance testing and individualized third-line treatment. Methods: We performed a retrospective analysis of South African adults living with HIV experiencing failure of ritonavirboosted-lopinavir (LPV/r)-based second-line ART for whom drug resistance testing results were available. Conclusions: PI-exposure testing revealed non-adherence in half of patients experiencing failure on second-line ART and accurately predicted the presence or absence of clinically relevant PI resistance. Drug resistance testing is costly, has a long turn-around time, and requires extensive laboratory infrastructure and specialist interpretation Due to these factors, capacity for resistance testing is limited in most LMIC. [12] The low prevalence of PI resistance implies that where resistance testing is implemented, PI resistance is only encountered in one in four patients with virological failure on second-line ART. While currently used surrogate adherence measures such as patient-reported adherence and pharmacy refill data generally correlate with treatment outcomes, these tests are either subjective or vulnerable to manipulation. [13,14,15,16,17] objective markers to determine adherence to second-line ART are urgently required

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