Cost-efficient HIV-1 drug resistance surveillance using multiplexed high-throughput amplicon sequencing: implications for use in low- and middle-income countries

Increased trends of primary drug resistance mutations (DRMs) among treatment-naive HIV-1-infected patients in low- and middle-income countries (LMICs) and the non-availability of pre-antiretroviral therapy (ART) genotypic resistance testing (GRT) may severely affect future therapeutic outcomes. The...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of antimicrobial chemotherapy 2014-12, Vol.69 (12), p.3349-3355
Hauptverfasser: Ekici, Halime, Rao, Shwetha D, Sönnerborg, Anders, Ramprasad, Vedam L, Gupta, Ravi, Neogi, Ujjwal
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Increased trends of primary drug resistance mutations (DRMs) among treatment-naive HIV-1-infected patients in low- and middle-income countries (LMICs) and the non-availability of pre-antiretroviral therapy (ART) genotypic resistance testing (GRT) may severely affect future therapeutic outcomes. The main objective of this study was therefore to develop a simplified, cost- and labour-efficient but high-throughput GRT protocol to be applied in the large-scale surveillance of DRMs in LMICs. Ninety-six therapy-naive HIV-1-infected patients belonging to three cohorts were included: Indian patients followed at St John's Medical College Hospital, Bangalore, India (n = 49); East Africans (n = 21), who had migrated to Sweden; and Caucasians (n = 26) living in Sweden. GRT by population sequencing (GRT-PS) on individual plasma samples and GRT by next-generation sequencing (GRT-NGS) on equimolar multiplexed samples (n = 24) using Illumina MiSeq were performed. The multiplexing procedure was shown to be technically feasible and gave high-quality reads independent of whether HIV-1 subtype C or B was analysed. GRT-NGS detected all the DRMs found by GRT-PS. Additional clinically important low-abundance (
ISSN:0305-7453
1460-2091
DOI:10.1093/jac/dku278