Real-life rilpivirine resistance and potential emergence of an E138A-positive HIV strain in north-eastern France

To assess the prevalence of resistance to rilpivirine and mutations at position 138 in reverse transcriptase and to identify associated epidemiological and biological characteristics. This retrospective study included 238 patients with available HIV-1 nucleotide sequences analysed at the Laboratory...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of antimicrobial chemotherapy 2014-11, Vol.69 (11), p.3095-3102
Hauptverfasser: Jeulin, H, Foissac, M, Boyer, L, Agrinier, N, Perrier, P, Kennel, A, Velay, A, Goehringer, F, Henard, S, Rabaud, C, May, T, Schvoerer, E
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:To assess the prevalence of resistance to rilpivirine and mutations at position 138 in reverse transcriptase and to identify associated epidemiological and biological characteristics. This retrospective study included 238 patients with available HIV-1 nucleotide sequences analysed at the Laboratory of Virology at the University Hospital of Nancy between January 2011 and June 2013. Resistance to non-nucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitors (NNRTIs) was evaluated according to the ANRS algorithm (version 23) and correlated with clinico-epidemiological and therapeutic data. The virus strains were analysed by evaluating the distance and distribution of the phylogenetic tree (MEGAv5). Among previously treated patients (111/238, 46.6%), 68/111 (61.3%) had received NNRTIs; all were rilpivirine-naive. The prevalence of rilpivirine resistance in the whole cohort was 12.6% (30/238), and was 10.2% (13/127) and 15.3% (17/111) in naive and pre-treated patients, respectively. The E138A mutation was the most frequent mutation associated with resistance to rilpivirine (P 
ISSN:0305-7453
1460-2091
DOI:10.1093/jac/dku256