Abstract

BackgroundPre-treatment drug resistance (PDR) among antiretroviral drug-naïve people living with HIV (PLHIV) represents an important indicator for the risk of treatment failure and the spread of drug resistant HIV variants. We assessed the prevalence of PDR and treatment outcomes among adults living with HIV-1 in Lilongwe, Malawi.MethodsWe selected 200 participants at random from the Lighthouse Tenofovir Cohort Study (LighTen). Serum samples were drawn prior to treatment initiation in 2014 and 2015, frozen, and later analyzed for the presence of HIV-1 drug resistance mutations. Amplicons were sequenced and interpreted by Stanford HIVdb interpretation algorithm 8.4. We assessed treatment outcomes by evaluating clinical outcome and viral suppression at the end of the follow-up period in October 2019.ResultsPDR testing was successful in 197 of 200 samples. The overall NNRTI- PDR prevalence was 13.7% (27/197). The prevalence of intermediate or high level NNRTI- PDR was 11.2% (22/197). The most common mutation was K103N (5.6%, 11/197), followed by Y181C (3.6%, 7/197). In one case, we detected an NRTI resistance mutation (M184V), in combination with multiple NNRTI resistance mutations. All HIV-1 isolates analyzed were of subtype C. Of the 27 patients with NNRTI- PDR, 9 were still alive, on ART, and virally suppressed at the end of follow-up.ConclusionThe prevalence of NNRTI- PDR was above the critical level of 10% suggested by the Global Action Plan on HIV Drug Resistance. The distribution of drug resistance mutations was similar to that seen in previous studies from the region, and further supports the introduction of integrase inhibitors in first-line treatment in Malawi. Furthermore, our findings underline the need for continued PDR surveillance and pharmacovigilance in Sub-Saharan Africa.

Highlights

  • The global availability of antiretroviral therapy (ART) has resulted in a great reduction of new HIV infections, HIV related morbidity, and mortality [1, 2]

  • We report the frequency and pattern of pretreatment HIV-1 drug resistance (PDR) and the treatment outcomes among a subgroup of this cohort

  • Baseline characteristics of the HIV drug resistance (HIVDR) testing group differed from the total Lighthouse Tenofovir Cohort Study (LighTen) cohort, with a higher proportion of World Health Organization (WHO) stage 1 (65% vs 43%) and a lower proportion of WHO stage 3 (9.6% vs 34.7%) in the HIVDR testing group

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Summary

Introduction

The global availability of antiretroviral therapy (ART) has resulted in a great reduction of new HIV infections, HIV related morbidity, and mortality [1, 2]. Pretreatment drug resistance (PDR) is defined by the WHO as resistance that is detected among people either newly initiating or reinitiating first-line ART [3]. The Lighthouse Clinic is the largest provider of HIV counselling, treatment and care in Lilongwe, Malawi [7]. At the onset of the study, the Lighthouse clinic was providing comprehensive HIV services to over 24 000 PLHIV in greater Lilongwe (own data). We report the frequency and pattern of pretreatment HIV-1 drug resistance (PDR) and the treatment outcomes among a subgroup of this cohort. Pre-treatment drug resistance (PDR) among antiretroviral drug-naïve people living with HIV (PLHIV) represents an important indicator for the risk of treatment failure and the spread of drug resistant HIV variants. We assessed the prevalence of PDR and treatment outcomes among adults living with HIV-1 in Lilongwe, Malawi

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