Abstract

The study aimed to characterize the prevalence and virological features of the rtA181S + T184I + M204I mutant in a large cohort of patients with chronic HBV infection. In total, 22,009 nucleoside/nucleotide analog-treated patients who underwent resistance testing at the Fifth Medical Center of Chinese PLA General Hospital between 2007 and 2016 were enrolled. Serum samples were collected for HBV reverse-transcriptase gene sequencing. Phenotypic analysis of the viral replication capacity and drug susceptibility was performed. The rtA181S mutation was detected in 0.82% (180/22,009) of samples. rtA181S-positive patients had significantly higher lamivudine (LAM), adefovir (ADV), and entecavir (ETV) exposure than rtA181S-negative patients. Of 180 rtA181S-positive patients, 42 had no coexistent resistance mutations, 34 had coexisting LAM-resistance mutation (LAMr), 17 had coexisting ADV-resistance mutation (ADVr), and 86 had coexisting ETV-resistance mutation (ETVr), and one had ADVr + ETVr. rtA181S + T184I + M204I occurred in 79.1% (68/86) of patients with rtA181S + ETVr and 37.8% (68/180) of all rtA181S-positive patients. Longitudinal analysis of the clinical course of resistant mutant evolution for four representative cases showed that rtA181S + T184I + M204I developed in all patients who had received LAM/telbivudine ± ADV and was receiving ETV or ADV + ETV. Compared with wild-type, the rtA181S + T184I + M204I mutant had 53.7% lower replication capacity and >1000-, 3.9-, and 383.3-fold greater LAM, ADV, and ETV resistance, respectively, but remained sensitive to tenofovir. Artificial elimination of rtA181S from the rtA181S + T184I + M204I mutant restored viral susceptibility to ADV but decreased viral replication capacity. Our study presented the first evidence that HBV rtA181S + T184I + M204I mutation had features of multidrug-resistance that contributed to resistance to both nucleoside and nucleotide analogs.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call