Abstract

Background Raltegravir has been shown to be active against wildtype HIV-2 with a phenotypic susceptibility similar to HIV-1. Due to the recent introduction of these novel inhibitors, information on the selection of resistance mutations and its phenotypic effect in this population is scarce. Objectives To explore in vitro the effect of raltegravir resistance in one individual with HIV-2 infection who failed raltegravir-HAART. Methods A 20-year-old man with HIV-2 infection received a raltegravir-based HAART regimen. Drug resistance mutations were examined in the integrase gene by sequence analysis. Phenotypic analyses were performed in two HIV-2 isolates from the patient (wildtype isolate: SP-2p2-175 and mutant isolate: SP-2p2-189) and a laboratory reference strain (HIV-2 ROD). Susceptibility to raltegravir was assessed in a PBMC culture assay. Furthermore, a replicative capacity assay was performed. Results After introduction of raltegravir, patient's HIV-2 viremia dropped 1 log but did not reach undetectability. Genotypic analysis at month 8 with raltegravir, revealed the development of N155H resistant mutation along with other changes in the HIV-2 integrase: V72I, I84V, A153G, N160K and S163S/G. These changes resulted in a 37-fold increase in phenotypic resistance to raltegravir. Wildtype HIV-2 integrase (SP-2p2-175) had an IC 50 of 21.5 nM and HIV-2 mutant virus (SP-2p2-189) showed an IC 50 of 789 nM. SP-2p2-189 virus presented also lower replicative capacity in the absence of raltegravir than wildtype. Conclusion A continued low HIV-2 viral load seems to be enough to select the N155H mutation, which despite significantly impairing viral replication, shows a level of resistance sufficient to give a selective advantage to the virus that maintains this pathway of resistance to raltegravir overtime.

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