561 results on '"Plantier, Jean-Christophe"'
Search Results
202. Performance evaluation of three rapid screening assays for detection of antibodies to hepatitis C virus in Cameroon.
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Fondjo, Clavel Landry Kouam, Ngoupo, Paul Alain Tagnouokam, Ngono, Laure, Plantier, Jean-Christophe, and Njouom, Richard
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HEPATITIS C diagnosis ,THERAPEUTIC use of immunoglobulins ,BIOLOGICAL assay ,MEDICAL screening ,BLOOD plasma - Abstract
Objective: This study was aimed at evaluating the performance of three CE-marked rapid diagnostic tests (RDTs): Multisure-HCV, First Response
® and Toyo® ; for screening anti- HCV antibody using plasma samples. Results: Overall, 200 plasma samples were used. Sensibility and specificity of these RDTs range from 71 to 99 and 78 to 100% respectively. Multisure scored a sensitivity at 99% (95% CI 97–100%) and First Response reached a specificity at 90% (95% CI 85–94.9%). Further studies should be conducted to establish an algorithm using these RTDs for the detection of HCV infection in Cameroon. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2018
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203. First evidence of a mother-to-child transmission of an HIV-1/MO intergroup recombinant form.
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Vautrin, Manon, Tombette, Fabienne, Icard, Vinca, Leoz, Marie, Trabaud, Mary-Anne, Ouziel, Antoine, Panetta, Luc, Lemée, Véronique, Plantier, Jean-Christophe, and Moisan, Alice
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GENETIC variation , *AIDS - Published
- 2024
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204. Failures in the Detection of HIV p24 Antigen With the Determine HIV-1/2 Ag/Ab Combo Rapid Test.
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Laperche, Syria, Leballais, Lionel, Ly, Thoai Duong, and Plantier, Jean Christophe
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LETTERS to the editor ,HIV infections - Abstract
A letter to the editor is presented in response to the article "Detection of acute HIV infection: a field evaluation of the Determine® HIV-1/2 Ag/Ab Combo test" by N.E. Rosenberg, G. Kamanga and S. Phiri in the 2012 issue.
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- 2012
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205. Evaluation of four commercial extraction-quantification systems to monitor EBV or CMV viral load in whole blood.
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Baron, Adeline, Gicquel, Albane, Plantier, Jean-Christophe, and Gueudin, Marie
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HERPESVIRUSES , *CYTOMEGALOVIRUSES , *VIRAL load , *BLOOD - Abstract
Highlights • Evaluation of four commercial systems to monitor Cytomegalovirus and Epstein-Barr virus. • Differences in sensitivity were observed but correlated with the manufacturers' lower limit of detection. • Correlation with WHO international standards was good for almost all of the assays. Abstract Background Measurement of cytomegalovirus (CMV) and Epstein-Barr virus (EBV) viral loads is commonly used to monitor posttransplant patients. Two new systems (eMAG/eSTREAM and Versant/kPCR) have been recently commercialized. Objectives To evaluate the performance of four systems to quantify CMV and EBV in whole blood. Study design Three extraction and real-time PCR amplification systems: m2000SP/RT (M2000), eMAG/eSTREAM (EMAG), and Versant/kPCR (KPCR) were compared with our routine system Qiasymphony/RGQ (QS/RGQ). The 4 systems were tested using 3 dilutions in triplicate according to the WHO international standard (WHO-IS) for intra-assay reproducibility; 56 whole blood samples (24 patients, 4 follow-ups) for CMV and 45 samples (27 patients, 3 follow-ups) for EBV. Results For CMV, the mean of the WHO-IS (expected value: 4.7 Log IU/ml) was: QS/RGQ=4.84, M2000=4.61, EMAG=4.33, and KPCR=4.79. One patient (10 samples) presented a major underquantification by QS/RGQ. Of the 46 remaining samples, 41 were quantified with QS/RGQ, 43 with M2000, 33 with EMAG and 24 with KPCR. For EBV, the mean of the WHO-IS was: QS/RGQ=4.70, M2000=4.61, EMAG=4.62, and KPCR=4.57. Among the 45 samples, 43 were quantified with QS/RGQ, 39 with M2000, 40 with EMAG and 32 with KPCR. Conclusion The results obtained with the WHO-IS were very good. The results of patients' samples were well correlated with the announced sensitivity of each system. The elevated threshold of the KPCR CMV assay may be problematic for the follow-up of highly immunocompromised patients who require early introduction of treatment. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
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206. Unequal Detection of HIV Type 1 Group O Infection by Simple Rapid Tests.
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Gautheret-Dejean, Agnès, Mesmin-Poho, Serge, Birguel, Jacques, Lemée, Véronique, Huraux, Jean-Marie, and Plantier, Jean-Christophe
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LETTERS to the editor ,HIV - Abstract
A letter to the editor is presented in response to the articles "A seronegative case of HIV-1 subtype C infection in Botswana," by V. Novitsky, T. Gaolathe, E. Woldegabriel, J. Makhema, and M. Essex and "HIV-1 subtype C seronegative AIDS," by C. Corcoran and D. Hardie in the previous issues.
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- 2008
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207. Use of Reverse Transcription-PCR-Based Assays for Quantification of HIV-1 in Dried Blood Spots Requires Specific HIV-1 RNA Isolation for Monitoring of Antiretroviral Treatment Efficiency
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Rouet, François, Kania, Dramane, Tuaillon, Edouard, Maiga, Almoustapha, Nouhin, Janin, Rouzioux, Christine, Descamps, Diane, and Plantier, Jean-Christophe
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- 2014
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208. Evaluation of Analytical and Clinical Performance and Usefulness in a Real-Life Hospital Setting of Two in-House Real-Time RT-PCR Assays to Track SARS-CoV-2 Variants of Concern.
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Moisan, Alice, Soares, Anaïs, De Oliveira, Fabienne, Alessandri-Gradt, Elodie, Lecoquierre, François, Fourneaux, Steeve, Plantier, Jean-Christophe, and Gueudin, Marie
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SARS-CoV-2 , *NUCLEOTIDE sequencing , *REVERSE transcriptase polymerase chain reaction , *REVERSE transcriptase , *COVID-19 pandemic - Abstract
Since the end of 2020, multiple severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) variants of concern (VOCs) have emerged and spread worldwide. Tracking their evolution has been a challenge due to the huge number of positive samples and limited capacities of whole-genome sequencing. Two in-house variant-screening RT-PCR assays were successively designed in our laboratory in order to detect specific known mutations in the spike region and to rapidly detect successively emerging VOCs. The first one (RT-PCR#1) targeted the 69–70 deletion and the N501Y substitution simultaneously, whereas the second one (RT-PCR#2) targeted the E484K, E484Q, and L452R substitutions simultaneously. To evaluate the analytical performance of these two RT-PCRs, 90 negative and 30 positive thawed nasopharyngeal swabs were retrospectively analyzed, and no discordant results were observed. Concerning the sensitivity, for RT-PCR#1, serial dilutions of the WHO international standard SARS-CoV-2 RNA, corresponding to the genome of an Alpha variant, were all detected up to 500 IU/mL. For RT-PCR#2, dilutions of a sample harboring the E484K substitution and of a sample harboring the L452R and E484Q substitutions were all detected up to 1000 IU/mL and 2000 IU/mL, respectively. To evaluate the performance in a real-life hospital setting, 1308 and 915 profiles of mutations, obtained with RT-PCR#1 and RT-PCR#2, respectively, were prospectively compared to next-generation sequencing (NGS) data. The two RT-PCR assays showed an excellent concordance with the NGS data, with 99.8% for RT-PCR#1 and 99.2% for RT-PCR#2. Finally, for each mutation targeted, the clinical sensitivity, the clinical specificity and the positive and negative predictive values showed excellent clinical performance. Since the beginning of the SARS-CoV-2 pandemic, the emergence of variants—impacting the disease's severity and the efficacy of vaccines and therapies—has forced medical analysis laboratories to constantly adapt to the strong demand for screening them. Our data showed that in-house RT-PCRs are useful and adaptable tools for monitoring such rapid evolution and spread of SARS-CoV-2 VOCs. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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209. Molecular confirmation of HIV-1 and HIV-2 coinfections among initially serologically dually-reactive samples from patients living in West Africa.
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Tchounga, Boris K., Bertine, Mélanie, Damond, Florence, Ferré, Valentine Marie, Inwoley, André, Boni, Simon P., Moisan, Alice, Plantier, Jean-Christophe, Descamps, Diane, Ekouevi, Didier K., and Charpentier, Charlotte
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HIV , *MIXED infections , *DIAGNOSIS of HIV infections , *DIAGNOSTIC use of polymerase chain reaction , *IMMUNOGLOBULINS , *MOLECULAR diagnosis - Abstract
Objectives: This study aimed to confirm the co-infection with HIV-1 and HIV-2, among West African patients using in-house HIV type/group enzyme-immuno assays and molecular diagnosis. Design: A cross-sectional survey was conducted from April 2016 to October 2017 in the biggest HIV clinics of Côte d'Ivoire and Burkina Faso. Method: A first serological confirmation was done in the referral laboratory using an in-house, indirect immuno-enzymatic essay allowing the qualitative detection of both HIV-1 and HIV-2 antibodies. In order to separately detect anti-HIV-1 and anti-HIV-2 antibodies, a type/group specific enzyme-immuno assay (HIV-GSEIA) was used. To confirm the co-infections, HIV-1 and HIV-2 DNA-qualitative PCR assays were performed. Results: A total of 91 patients were enrolled in the study and provided blood sample for HIV type confirmatory testing including 13 (14.3%) HIV-2 mono-reactive and 78 (85.7%) HIV-1/HIV-2 dually-reactive based on the HIV testing National Algorithms. The first serological ELISA confirmatory test performed showed that 80 (78.9%) of the 91 participants were dually-reactive. The HIV-GSEIA performed on these 80 serum samples retrieve one 61 HIV-1/HIV-2 dually-reactive samples. HIV-1 and HIV-2 DNA PCR were performed on 54 of the 61 HIV-1/HIV-2 dually-reactive samples and 46 out of 61 (75.4%) samples were found HIV-1/HIV-2 coinfected. Conclusion: The contribution of type/group specific enzyme-immuno assay to accurately identify HIV-1/HIV-2 coinfections remain suboptimal, emphasizing the need for molecular diagnosis platforms in West Africa, to avail HIV DNA PCR test for the confirmation of HIV-1/HIV-2 co-infections. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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210. Performance evaluation of the Access anti-HBc Total assay on the DxI 9000 Access Immunoassay Analyzer.
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Dzamitika, Simplice, Boulaire, Françoise Le, Coignard, Catherine, Vincent, Claire, Plantier, Jean-Christophe, Lemée, Véronique, Gréaume, Sandrine, Voisin, Isabelle, Brochot, Etienne, Herpe, Yves-Edouard, Demirdjian, Gaiane, Karagueuzian, Magali, Afful, Derrick, Bayoud, Rima, and Hey, Juliane
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IMMUNOASSAY , *BLOOD donors , *BLOOD sampling , *HEPATITIS B , *SEROCONVERSION - Abstract
This study evaluated the diagnostic and analytical performances of the Access anti-HBc Total assay on the DxI 9000 Access Immunoassay System (Beckman Coulter Inc.). The multicenter study involved both prospective and retrospective sample collection from non-selected blood donors, hospitalized patients, or presumed anti-HBc Total positive individuals. Fresh/previously-frozen samples were tested with the Access and comparator assays to determine concordance; discrepant samples were tested with a second CE-marked assay. Among the 5983 non-selected fresh blood donor samples deemed anti-HBc Total negative, clinical specificity of the Access assay was 99.58% (95%CI: 99.38–99.72%). Clinical specificity was 99.27% (97.37–99.80%) among 273 anti-HBc Total negative hospitalized patient samples. Clinical sensitivity on 450 anti-HBc Total positive samples was 99.78% (98.75–99.96%). Evaluation in seroconversion panels revealed an average 1.4-day earlier detection versus a comparator assay. The Access assay demonstrated excellent clinical and analytical performances comparable to existing CE-marked anti-HBc Total assays. NCT04904835. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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211. Evaluation of the ELITechGroup solution for plasma HIV-1 RNA quantification.
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Baron, Adeline, Moisan, Alice, Unal, Guillemette, Lemée, Véronique, Etienne, Manuel, and Plantier, Jean-Christophe
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HIV , *VIRAL load , *RNA , *RANK correlation (Statistics) , *GENETIC variation - Abstract
• The genetic diversity of HIV-1 has been a major concern for plasma RNA quantification. • It is essential to evaluate the performances of new kits on a wide panel of HIV-1 group M circulating variants. • The new kit, HIV1 ELITe MGB Kit with InGenius, can be used for the monitoring of patients infected with various endemic HIV-1 strains. In the last few years, many manufacturers have developed new kits for plasma HIV-1 RNA quantification. Recently, a solution consisting of the ELITe InGenius® instrument and the HIV1 ELITe MGB®kit has been commercialized worldwide. Our aim was to compare its clinical performance with the Aptima® HIV-1 Quant Dx kit by Hologic, on a panel of HIV-1 group M circulating variants, representative of viral load levels found during the pre- and post-treatment follow-up of patients. The linearity was evaluated on the AcroMetrix® HIV-1 Panel. Clinical specificity was evaluated on 100 plasma samples negative for HIV; and clinical sensitivity and sequential follow-up were evaluated on 166 HIV-1 positive plasma samples from 126 patients. The linearity data showed a difference obtained for each point of less than 0.2 Log cp/mL. No amplification was found for the 100 HIV negative clinical specimens. The overall agreement between the two kits was 83.7 %; the differences corresponded to a slightly higher detection for the Aptima kit (with more samples detected below the lower limit of quantification). A Bland & Altman analysis of the quantifiable samples showed a mean difference of −0.05 Log and Spearman's coefficient was 0.975. Only six samples presented discrepancies (above 0.5 Log), but these differences were overall similar between the two kits. Our study has shown that the HIV1 ELITe MGB® Kit can be successfully used for the monitoring of patients infected with various epidemic HIV-1 strains, and for the precise quantification of the viral load. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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212. Performance Analysis of Three Commercial Kits Designed for RNA Quantification of HIV-1 Group O Variants.
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Alessandri-Gradt, Elodie, Unal, Guillemette, Baron, Adeline, Leoz, Marie, Gueudin, Marie, and Plantier, Jean-Christophe
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Background: The genetic divergence of HIV-1 group O is high relative to pandemic group M, which could impact detection and quantification of plasma RNA. Recent commercial kits for RNA quantification seem to show good performances in HIV-1/O, but discrepancies are still observed. Here, we compare the performances of 3 commercial assays for the RNA quantification of HIV-1/O. Methods: We studied the RNA quantification of 117 clinical samples using Abbott RealTime HIV-1, Cepheid Xpert HIV-1 Viral Load, or Roche Cobas TaqMan HIV-1 v2. First, we conducted a qualitative description, and second, we focused on a quantitative analysis of the results above 40 cp/mL. The degree of agreement between methods and the strength of the correlation of viral load determination were estimated using Bland-Altman plot and Passing-Bablok regression with the Spearman coefficient, respectively. Results: Our 2-by-2 analysis showed that the Abbott and Cepheid assays were very close in terms of correlation and dispersion of points, whereas Roche presented higher values in the highest range of quantification (.5 log10). The Cepheid assay combined better correlation with the consensus value and a lower dispersion of values, leading to an overall better performance of quantification. The quantification was still impacted by intragroup genetic diversity with, here, 1 strain (YBF26). Conclusions: Using a new approach to compare the performances of RNA quantification between more than 2 techniques, we demonstrated that Cepheid could be the most suitable assay for HIV-1/O quantification, although the results from all assays remained strain dependent. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2021
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213. HIV-1 non-group M phenotypic susceptibility in vitro to bictegravir and cabotegravir.
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Martin, Charlène, Gracias, Ségolène, Charpentier, Charlotte, Descamps, Diane, Hingrat, Quentin Le, Plantier, Jean-Christophe, Alessandri-Gradt, Elodie, and Le Hingrat, Quentin
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HIV , *PHENOTYPES , *DRUG utilization , *PANEL analysis , *PROTEINS , *HIV infections , *PYRIDINE , *RESEARCH , *HIV integrase inhibitors , *HETEROCYCLIC compounds , *RESEARCH methodology , *MEDICAL cooperation , *EVALUATION research , *COMPARATIVE studies , *RESEARCH funding , *DRUG resistance in microorganisms , *AMIDES - Abstract
Objectives: HIV-1 group O (HIV-1/O) is one of the four HIV-1 groups and is endemic in Cameroon, representing 1% of HIV-1 infections in the population. Around 50% of the strains of this group naturally show a mutation (Y181C) providing them with resistance to NNRTIs and making therapeutic management more difficult. Today, the WHO recommends the use of integrase strand transfer inhibitors (INSTIs) as first-line treatment. Bictegravir and cabotegravir are the two most recent INSTIs. Because of the genetic polymorphism of HIV-1/O, studies are required to evaluate their phenotypic susceptibility to these two drugs.Patients and Methods: We performed a phenotypic study on a large panel including 41 HIV-1/O clinical isolates and other rare non-group M HIV-1 (2 HIV-1/N and 1 HIV-1/P) to evaluate in vitro susceptibility to bictegravir and cabotegravir.Results: The results showed an overall susceptibility of non-group M strains to the two drugs compared with HIV-1 group M. There was no difference between the mean (min-max) IC50 of HIV-1/M [1.86 (0.93-4.12) and 5.24 (1.76-12.41) nM for bictegravir and cabotegravir, respectively] and HIV-1/non-M [2.17 (0.03-9.47) and 4.88 (0.02-15.64) nM for bictegravir and cabotegravir, respectively]. However, we found a significant difference between IC50 values for bictegravir and cabotegravir in the whole panel (P value < 0.001).Conclusions: This study has shown encouraging results regarding the clinical use of these drugs in HIV-1/non-M-infected patients, which will need to be confirmed with clinical data. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2021
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214. Modeling SARS-CoV-2 viral kinetics and association with mortality in hospitalized patients from the French COVID cohort.
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Néant, Nadège, Lingas, Guillaume, Le Hingrat, Quentin, Ghosn, Jade, Engelmann, Ilka, Lepiller, Quentin, Gaymard, Alexandre, Ferré, Virginie, Hartard, Cédric, Plantier, Jean-Christophe, Thibault, Vincent, Marlet, Julien, Montes, Brigitte, Bouiller, Kevin, Lescure, François-Xavier, Timsit, Jean-François, Faure, Emmanuel, Poissy, Julien, Chidiac, Christian, and Raffi, François
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COVID-19 , *SARS-CoV-2 , *HOSPITAL patients , *PATIENTS , *GENDER - Abstract
The characterization of severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) viral kinetics in hospitalized patients and its association with mortality is unknown. We analyzed death and nasopharyngeal viral kinetics in 655 hospitalized patients from the prospective French COVID cohort. The model predicted a median peak viral load that coincided with symptom onset. Patients with age ≥65 y had a smaller loss rate of infected cells, leading to a delayed median time to viral clearance occurring 16 d after symptom onset as compared to 13 d in younger patients (P < 10-4). In multivariate analysis, the risk factors associated with mortality were age ≥65 y, male gender, and presence of chronic pulmonary disease (hazard ratio [HR] > 2.0). Using a joint model, viral dynamics after hospital admission was an independent predictor of mortality (HR = 1.31, P < 10-3). Finally, we used our model to simulate the effects of effective pharmacological interventions on time to viral clearance and mortality. A treatment able to reduce viral production by 90% upon hospital admission would shorten the time to viral clearance by 2.0 and 2.9 d in patients of age <65 y and ≥65 y, respectively. Assuming that the association between viral dynamics and mortality would remain similar to that observed in our population, this could translate into a reduction of mortality from 19 to 14% in patients of age ≥65 y with risk factors. Our results show that viral dynamics is associated with mortality in hospitalized patients. Strategies aiming to reduce viral load could have an effect on mortality rate in this population. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
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215. Antibody response to SARS-CoV-2 mRNA BNT162b2 vaccine in kidney transplant recipients and in-centre and satellite centre haemodialysis patients.
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Bertrand, Dominique, Hanoy, Mélanie, Edet, Stéphane, Lemée, Veronique, Hamzaoui, Mouad, Laurent, Charlotte, Ludivine, Lebourg, Etienne, Isabelle, Lemoine, Mathilde, Nezam, Dorian, Candon, Sophie, Plantier, Jean-Christophe, Roy, Frank Le, and Guerrot, Dominique
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SARS-CoV-2 , *ANTIBODY formation , *HEMODIALYSIS patients , *KIDNEY transplantation , *COVID-19 vaccines - Published
- 2021
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216. HIV-1 subtype B-infected MSM may have driven the spread of transmitted resistant strains in France in 2007-12: impact on susceptibility to first-line strategies.
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Frange, Pierre, Assoumou, Lambert, Descamps, Diane, Chéret, Antoine, Goujard, Cécile, Tran, Laurent, Gousset, Marine, Avettand-Fenoël, Veronique, Bocket, Laurence, Fafi-Kremer, Samira, Guinard, Jerome, Morand-Joubert, Laurence, Nicot, Florence, Plantier, Jean-Christophe, Rogez, Sylvie, Wirden, Marc, Rouzioux, Christine, Meyer, Laurence, and Chaix, Marie-Laure
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HIV , *DRUG resistance , *DISEASE susceptibility , *ETRAVIRINE (Drug) , *RILPIVIRINE , *EFAVIRENZ , *INTEGRASE inhibitors - Abstract
Background: Our study describes the prevalence of transmitted drug resistance (TDR) among 1318 French patients diagnosed at the time of primary HIV-1 infection (PHI) in 2007-12. Methods: HIV-1 resistance-associated mutations (RAMs) were characterized using both the 2009 WHO list of mutations and the French ANRS algorithm. A genotypic susceptibility score was estimated for each first-line recommended ART combination. Results: Patients were mainly MSM (72.6%). Non-B variants were identified in 33.7% of patients. The proportion of TDR was estimated as 11.7% (95% CI 10.0-13.5). The prevalences of PI-, NRTI-, first-generation NNRTI and etravirine/rilpivirine-associated RAMs were 2.5%, 5.2%, 3.9% and 3.2%, respectively. Single, dual and triple class resistance was found in 9.6%, 1.0% and 1.1% of cases, respectively. Additionally, 5/331 strains isolated in 2010- 12 had integrase inhibitor (II)-related RAMs (isolated E157Q mutation in all cases). TDR was more common among MSM than in other groups (12.9% versus 8.6%, P=0.034), and in case of B versus non-B subtype infections (13.6% versus 7.9%, P=0.002). The proportions of fully active combinations were ≥99.2%, ≥97.3% and ≥95.3% in cases of PI-, II- and NNRTI-based regimens, respectively. In 2010-12, the proportion of fully active efavirenzbased ART was lower in cases of subtype B versus non-B infection (P=0.021). Conclusions: Compared with our previous studies, the proportion of NRTI- and first-generation NNRTI-related TDR has continued to decline in French seroconverters. However, subtype B-infected MSM could drive the spread of resistant HIV strains. Finally, we suggest preferring PI- or II- to NNRTI-based combinations to treat PHI patients. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2015
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217. National sentinel surveillance of transmitted drug resistance in antiretroviral-naive chronically HIV-infected patients in France over a decade: 2001–2011.
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Descamps, Diane, Assoumou, Lambert, Chaix, Marie-Laure, Chaillon, Antoine, Pakianather, Sophie, de Rougemont, Alexis, Storto, Alexandre, Dos Santos, Georges, Krivine, Anne, Delaugerre, Constance, Montes, Brigitte, Izopet, Jacques, Charpentier, Charlotte, Wirden, Marc, Maillard, Anne, Morand-Joubert, Laurence, Pallier, Coralie, Plantier, Jean-Christophe, Guinard, Jérôme, and Tamalet, Catherine
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DRUG resistance , *HIV-positive persons , *GENETIC mutation , *ANTIRETROVIRAL agents , *PROTEOLYTIC enzymes - Abstract
Objectives As recommended by the French ANRS programme for the surveillance of HIV-1 resistance, we estimated the prevalence of transmitted drug resistance-associated mutations (RAMs) in antiretroviral-naive, chronically HIV-1-infected patients. Methods RAMs were sought in samples from 661 newly diagnosed HIV-1-infected patients in 2010/11 at 36 HIV clinical care centres. Weighted analyses were used to derive representative estimates of the percentage of patients with RAMs. Results At patient inclusion, the prevalence of virus with protease (PR) or reverse transcriptase (RT) RAMs was 9.0% (95% CI 6.8%–11.2%). No integrase RAMs were observed. The prevalences of protease inhibitor, nucleoside RT inhibitor and non-nucleoside RT inhibitor RAMs were 1.8%, 6.2% and 2.4%, respectively. Resistance to one, two and three classes of antiretroviral agent was observed in 7.9%, 0.9% and 0.2% of patients, respectively. The frequency of RAMs was higher in patients infected with B compared with non-B subtype virus (11.9% versus 5.1%, P = 0.003). Baseline characteristics (gender, age, country of transmission, CD4 cell count and viral load) were not associated with the prevalence of transmitted RAMs. However, men having sex with men (MSM) were more frequently infected with resistant virus than were other transmission groups (12.5% versus 5.8%, P = 0.003). Compared with the 2006/07 survey, the overall prevalence of resistance remained stable. However, a significant decrease in the frequency of virus with PR RAMs was observed in 2010/11 compared with the 2006/07 survey (1.8% versus 5.0%, P = 0.003). Conclusions In France in 2010/11, the global prevalence of transmitted drug-resistant variants was 9.0%, and the prevalence was stable compared with the 2006/07 survey. MSM and B subtype-infected patients are the groups with a higher prevalence of drug resistance. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2013
218. A cohort study of treatment-experienced HIV-1-infected patients treated with raltegravir: factors associated with virological response and mutations selected at failure.
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Marcelin, Anne-Geneviève, Delaugerre, Constance, Beaudoux, Céline, Descamps, Diane, Morand-Joubert, Laurence, Amiel, Corinne, Schneider, Veronique, Ferre, Virginie, Izopet, Jacques, Si-Mohamed, Ali, Maillard, Anne, Henquell, Cécile, Desbois, Delphine, Lazrek, Mouna, Signori-Schmuck, Anne, Rogez, Sylvie, Yerly, Sabine, Trabaud, Mary-Anne, Plantier, Jean-Christophe, and Fourati, Slim
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HIV infections , *RALTEGRAVIR , *GENETIC mutation , *VIROLOGY , *NUCLEOSIDE reverse transcriptase inhibitors , *INTEGRASE inhibitors , *ANTIRETROVIRAL agents - Abstract
Abstract: This study aimed to identify factors associated with virological response (VR) to raltegravir (RAL)-containing regimens in 468 treatment-experienced but integrase inhibitor-naive HIV-1 patients receiving a RAL-containing regimen. VR was defined at Month 6 (M6) as HIV-1 RNA viral load (VL) <50copies/mL. The impacts on VR of baseline integrase mutations, VL, CD4 count, genotypic sensitivity score for nucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitors, non-nucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitors and protease inhibitors, and the number of new antiretrovirals used for the first time associated with RAL were investigated. For patients with VL >50copies/mL at M6, integrase mutations selected were characterised. Median baseline VL was 4.2log10 copies/mL (IQR 3.3–4.9log10 copies/mL) and CD4 count was 219 cells/mm3 (IQR 96–368 cells/mm3). At M6, 71% of patients were responders. In multivariate analysis, baseline VL and CD4 count and ≥2 new antiretrovirals among darunavir, etravirine, maraviroc and enfuvirtide were associated with VR to RAL. Neither HIV-1 subtype nor baseline integrase polymorphisms were associated with VR to RAL. Among 63 failing patients at M6, selection of ≥1 change in the integrase gene was observed in 49 (77.8%), and 27/63 (42.9%) were considered as RAL-associated resistance mutations. Factors independently associated with the occurrence of ≥1 RAL-associated resistance mutation were VL at failure >3log10 and having no new drugs associated with RAL. RAL showed great potency in treatment-experienced patients. The number of new drugs associated with RAL was an important factor associated with VR. HIV-1 subtype and baseline integrase polymorphisms do not influence the RAL VR. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
- Published
- 2013
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219. Prevalence of HIV-1 drug resistance in treated patients with viral load >50 copies/mL in 2009: a French nationwide study.
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Assoumou, Lambert, Descamps, Diane, Yerly, Sabine, Dos Santos, Georges, Marcelin, Anne-Geneviève, Delaugerre, Constance, Morand-Joubert, Laurence, Ruffault, Annick, Izopet, Jacques, Plantier, Jean-Christophe, Pakianather, Sophie, Montes, Brigitte, Chaix, Marie-Laure, Wirden, Marc, Costagliola, Dominique, Masquelier, Bernard, and ANRS AC11 Resistance Group
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- 2013
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220. Impact of lopinavir/ritonavir use on antiretroviral resistance in recent clinical practice.
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Lambert-Niclot, Sidonie, Masquelier, Bernard, Cohen Codar, Isabelle, Soulie, Cathia, Delaugerre, Constance, Morand-Joubert, Laurence, Charpentier, Charlotte, Ferre, Virginie, Plantier, Jean-Christophe, Montes, Brigitte, Carret, Sophie, Perrot, Valerie, Peytavin, Gilles, Costagliola, Dominique, Calvez, Vincent, and Marcelin, Anne-Geneviève
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LOPINAVIR-ritonavir , *DRUG resistance in microorganisms , *MEDICAL virology , *PROTEASE inhibitors , *REVERSE transcriptase inhibitors - Abstract
Objectives This observational study was requested by French health authorities to determine the impact of lopinavir/ritonavir (Kaletra®) on antiretroviral resistance in clinical practice. Virological failures of lopinavir/ritonavir and their effects on the resistance to protease inhibitors and reverse transcriptase inhibitors were evaluated in protease inhibitor-experienced patients. Patients and methods Virological failure was defined as an HIV-1 plasma viral load >50 copies/mL after at least 3 months of lopinavir/ritonavir-containing antiretroviral therapy. For all patients, a resistance genotypic test was available at failure and before lopinavir/ritonavir treatment. Data from 72 patients with inclusion criteria were studied. Results The mean viral load at baseline was 4 log10 copies/mL (1.6–6.5). Mutations in the protease gene significantly selected between baseline and failure were L10V, K20R, L33F, M36I, I47V, I54V, A71V and I85V (P < 0.05). Patients who had more than seven protease inhibitor mutations at baseline showed a significantly increased risk of occurrence of protease inhibitor mutations. The proportion of viruses susceptible to atazanavir, fosamprenavir and darunavir decreased significantly between baseline and failure (P < 0.05). Among patients with a virus susceptible to atazanavir at day 0, 26% (n = 14) exhibited a virus resistant or possibly resistant at the time of failure. This proportion was 32% (n = 16) for fosamprenavir and 16% (n = 7) for darunavir. Conclusions A darunavir-based regimen appears to be a sequential option in the case of lopinavir/ritonavir failure. To compare and determine the best treatment sequencing, similar studies should be performed for darunavir/ritonavir and atazanavir/ritonavir. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
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- 2012
221. Increasing prevalence of transmitted drug resistance mutations and non-B subtype circulation in antiretroviral-naive chronically HIV-infected patients from 2001 to 2006/2007 in France.
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Descamps, Diane, Chaix, Marie-Laure, Montes, Brigitte, Pakianather, Sophie, Charpentier, Charlotte, Storto, Alexandre, Barin, Francis, Santos, Georges Dos, Krivine, Anne, Delaugerre, Constance, Izopet, Jacques, Marcelin, Anne-Geneviève, Maillard, Anne, Morand-Joubert, Laurence, Pallier, Coralie, Plantier, Jean-Christophe, Tamalet, Catherine, Cottalorda, Jacqueline, Desbois, Delphine, and Calvez, Vincent
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HIV-positive persons , *VIRUS-induced immunosuppression , *HIV infections , *DRUG resistance - Abstract
Objectives To estimate the prevalence of transmitted drug resistance mutations and non-B subtype circulation in antiretroviral-naive chronically HIV-1-infected patients in France. Methods Resistance mutations were sought in samples from 530 newly diagnosed HIV-1-infected patients from October 2006 to March 2007. Protease and reverse transcriptase mutations were identified from the 2007 Stanford Resistance Surveillance list. Results Reverse transcriptase and protease resistance mutations were determined in 466 patients with duration of seropositivity <5 years. 42% of patients were infected with non-B subtype strains (CRF02 18.3%). The overall prevalence of viruses with protease or reverse transcriptase mutations was 10.6% (95% confidence interval 6.7–16.3). The prevalence of protease inhibitor, nucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitor and non-nucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitor resistance-associated mutations was 4.7%, 5.8% and 2.8%, respectively. Frequency of resistance was not different in patients infected with B (9.5%) and non-B (CRF02 7.8% and other 11.2%) subtypes. Baseline characteristics such as gender, age, transmission group, country of transmission, disease stage, CD4 counts and viral load were not associated with the prevalence of transmitted drug resistance. Conclusions In France in 2006/2007, the prevalence of transmitted drug-resistant variants was 10.6%. Prevalence of transmitted drug resistance was comparable in B and non-B subtypes. Prevalence of non-B subtypes is still rising. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
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- 2010
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222. Monitoring the Dynamics of the HIV Epidemic Using Assays for Recent Infection and Serotyping among New HIV Diagnoses: Experience after 2 Years in France.
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Semaille, Caroline, Barin,2, Francis, Cazein, Françoise, Pillonel, Josiane, Lot, Florence, Brand, Denys, Plantier, Jean-Christophe, Bernillon, Pascale, Le Vu, Stéphane, Pinget, Roselyne, and Desenclos, Jean-Claude
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EPIDEMICS , *HIV infection transmission , *MOLECULAR dynamics , *HIV infections , *SERUM , *EPIDEMIOLOGY , *PUBLIC health - Abstract
Background. New tools to better monitor dynamics of human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) transmission are needed. Methods. National surveillance of newly HIV diagnoses included the collection of dried serum spots to identify both recent infections (<6 months) and HIV serotypes. Multivariate analyses were used to identify factors associated with recent infection and infection with non-B subtypes. Results. Between 2003 and March 2005, 7902 new HIV diagnoses were reported. The overall proportion of recent infections was 24.9% (95% confidence interval, 23.8%–26.0%) and was highest among men who have sex with men (MSM; 46%). Recent infection was associated with being an MSM, <30 years old, of French nationality, and living in Paris. Nearly half of newly HIV-1 diagnoses were with non-B subtypes. The highest proportion of non-B infections was reported among African heterosexual persons (81%), but important proportions were reported among French heterosexual persons (34%) and MSM (12%). Being infected by a non-B subtype was independently associated with being African, <30 years old, heterosexual, and living in Paris. The proportion of HIV-2 infection was 1.9%, and 11 cases of HIV-1 group O infection were identified, mainly among West Africans. Conclusions. There is evidence of high levels of HIV transmission among MSM in France and transmission of non-B subtypes within the indigenous French population. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2007
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223. Detection and characterization of HIV-1 group O and HIV-2 in the Central African Republic.
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Moussa S, Tagnouokam-Ngoupo PA, Tombette F, Manirakiza A, Boum Y 2nd, Vernet G, Njouom R, Belec L, Plantier JC, and Kfutwah A
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- Humans, Central African Republic epidemiology, Male, Female, Adult, Young Adult, Middle Aged, Sequence Analysis, DNA, Genotype, Phylogeny, Polymerase Chain Reaction methods, Serotyping methods, HIV-1 genetics, HIV-1 isolation & purification, HIV-1 classification, HIV-2 genetics, HIV-2 isolation & purification, HIV-2 classification, HIV Infections epidemiology, HIV Infections virology, HIV Infections diagnosis, Genetic Variation
- Abstract
The Central African Republic (CAR) is characterized by widespread HIV epidemic with notable prevalence and genetic diversity. We herein analysed the genetic diversity of atypical non-M HIV-1 strains. In-house serotyping assays for variants of HIV-1 (M, N, O, P) and HIV-2 were used to test a biological collection of 6092 HIV-seropositive blood samples collected between 2003 and 2014 at the Institut Pasteur de Bangui. Samples indicative of recombinant M/O groups, HIV-2, or those that yield doubtful/negative results underwent further PCR tests and sequencing. We found six atypical HIV strains: specifically, three (0.05%) HIV-1 group O strains (subtype H) detected in samples from 2005, 2008 and 2009, alongside three (0.05%) HIV-2 strains (two group A and one group B) identified in samples from 2007 and 2009. HIV-1/O strains showed a genetic link to Cameroon and Gabon strains. This study highlights the dominance of HIV-1/M in the CAR's HIV epidemic over time and underscores the infrequent occurrence of HIV-1 group O and HIV-2 strains. These findings validate the efficacy of WHO-recommended HIV testing protocols and emphasize the need for adaptive surveillance and management strategies to confront the complexities introduced by the genetic diversity of HIV strains., (© 2024 Scandinavian Societies for Pathology, Medical Microbiology and Immunology.)
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- 2024
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224. In vitro phenotypic susceptibility of HIV-1 non-group M to CCR5 inhibitor (maraviroc): TROPI-CO study.
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Gracias S, El Yaalaoui I, Visseaux B, Charpentier C, Descamps D, Martin C, Lermechain F, Plantier J-C, and Alessandri-Gradt E
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- Humans, Inhibitory Concentration 50, Triazoles pharmacology, Phenotype, Microbial Sensitivity Tests, Receptors, CCR5 metabolism, Receptors, CCR5 genetics, Anti-HIV Agents pharmacology, Cyclohexanes pharmacology, Drug Resistance, Viral genetics, HIV Fusion Inhibitors pharmacology, HIV-1 drug effects, HIV-1 genetics, HIV-1 physiology, Maraviroc pharmacology, CCR5 Receptor Antagonists pharmacology, HIV Infections virology, HIV Infections drug therapy, Viral Tropism
- Abstract
The susceptibility of genetically divergent HIV-1 strains (HIV-1 non-M) from groups O, N, and P to the CCR5 co-receptor antagonist, maraviroc (MVC), was investigated among a large panel of 45 clinical strains, representative of the viral genetic diversity. The results were compared to the reference strains of HIV-1 group M (HIV-1/M) with known tropism. Among the non-M strains, a wide range of phenotypic susceptibilities to MVC were observed. The large majority of HIV-1/O strains (40/42) displayed a high susceptibility to MVC, with median and mean IC
50 values of 1.23 and 1.33 nM, respectively, similar to the HIV-1/M R5 strain (1.89 nM). However, the two remaining HIV-1/O strains exhibited a lower susceptibility (IC50 at 482 and 496 nM), in accordance with their dual/mixed (DM) tropism. Interestingly, the two HIV-1/N strains demonstrated varying susceptibility patterns, despite always having relatively low IC50 values (2.87 and 47.5 nM). This emphasized the complexity of determining susceptibility solely based on IC50 values. Our study examined the susceptibility of all HIV-1 non-M groups to MVC and correlated these findings with virus tropism (X4, R5, or DM). The results confirm the critical significance of tropism determination before initiating MVC treatment in patients infected with HIV-1 non-M. Furthermore, we advocate for the consideration of additional parameters, such as the slope of inhibition curves, to provide a more thorough characterization of phenotypic susceptibility profiles., Importance: Unlike HIV-1 group M, the scarcity of studies on HIV-1 non-M groups (O, N, and P) presents challenges in understanding their susceptibility to antiretroviral treatments, particularly due to their natural resistance to non-nucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitors. The TROPI-CO study logically complements our prior investigations into integrase inhibitors and anti-gp120 efficacy. The largest panel of 45 non-M strains existing so far yielded valuable results on maraviroc (MVC) susceptibility. The significant variations in MVC IC50 reveal a spectrum of susceptibilities, with most strains displaying R5 tropism. Notably, the absence of MVC-resistant strains suggests a potential therapeutic avenue. The study also employs a robust novel cell-based phenotropism assay and identifies distinct groups of susceptibilities based on inhibition curve slopes. Our findings emphasize the importance of determining tropism before initiating MVC and provide crucial insights for selecting effective therapeutic strategies in the delicate context of HIV-1 non-M infections., Competing Interests: The authors declare no conflict of interest.- Published
- 2024
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225. Performance evaluation of the Access HBsAg and Access HBsAg confirmatory assays on the DxI 9000 Access Immunoassay Analyzer.
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Visseaux B, Gautier J, Le Boulaire F, Coignard C, Vincent C, Gréaume S, Voisin I, Lemée V, Plantier JC, Herpe YE, Brochot E, Bord S, Turini M, Roulet V, and Hey J
- Abstract
Introduction: This study evaluated the clinical and analytical performances of the Access HBsAg and the Access HBsAg Confirmatory assays on the DxI 9000 Access Immunoassay Analyzer (Beckman Coulter, Inc.)., Materials and Methods: Diagnostic specificity and sensitivity of the Access HBsAg and Access HBsAg Confirmatory assays were evaluated by comparing the Access assays to the final HBsAg sample status determined using the Architect, PRISM, or Elecsys HBsAg assays, along with Architect or PRISM HBsAg Confirmatory assays. Imprecision, sensitivity on seroconversion panels, analytical sensitivity on WHO, and recognition of HBV variants were also evaluated., Results: A total of 7534 samples were included in the analysis (6047 blood donors, 1032 hospitalized patients, 455 positive patients' samples). Access HBsAg assay sensitivity and specificity were at 100.00% (99.19-100.0) and 99.92% (99.82-99.97), respectively. Sensitivity of Access HBsAg Confirmatory assay was 100.00% (99.21-100.0) on the 464 HBsAg positive samples. The use of a high positive algorithm for the Access HBsAg assay, wherein samples with S/CO ≥ 100.00 were considered positive without requiring repeat or confirmatory testing, was successfully evaluated with all 450 specimens with S/CO greater than 100.00 (sensitivity 100.00%; 99.19-100.0). Access HBsAg assay demonstrated good analytical performance, equivalent recognition of seroconversion panels compared to Architect assay, and an analytical sensitivity between 0.022 and 0.025 IU/mL. All HBV genotypes, subtypes and mutants were well detected without analytical sensitivity loss., Conclusion: Access HBsAg and Access HBsAg Confirmatory assays demonstrated robust performances. They provide low samples volume requirements and a simplified process, no systematic retesting for high positive samples., Competing Interests: B.V., J.G., F.B., C.C., C.V., S.G., I.V., V.L., J-C.P., Y-E.H., E.B. declare no conflicts of interest, none of them received personal fees from Beckman Coulter and all are employees of institutions or companies paid by Beckman Coulter to perform this study. V.R., J.H., S.B. and M.T. are employees of Beckman Coulter., (© 2024 The Authors. Published by Elsevier B.V.)
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- 2024
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226. In vitro replicative potential of an HIV-1/MO intergroup recombinant virus compared to HIV-1/M and HIV-1/O parental viruses.
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Moisan A, Tombette F, Vautrin M, Alessandri-Gradt E, Mourez T, and Plantier JC
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- Humans, Recombination, Genetic, Parents, HIV-1 genetics, HIV Infections, HIV Seropositivity, Orthopoxvirus
- Abstract
Genetic recombination is one of the major evolution processes of HIV-1. Despite their great genetic divergence, HIV-1 groups M and O can generate HIV-1/MO intergroup recombinants. The current description of 20 HIV-1/MO unique recombinant forms suggests a possible benefit of the recombination. The aim of this work was to study in vitro the replicative potential of HIV-1/MO recombinant forms. This analysis was based on a simple recombination pattern, [O
gag/pol -Menv ], harboring a breakpoint in Vpr. A chimeric infectious molecular clone, pOM-TB-2016 was synthesized from HIV-1/M subtype B and HIV-1/O subgroup T and recombinant viruses were obtained by transfection/co-culture. To compare the replicative potential of these viruses, two markers were monitored in culture supernatants: Reverse Transcriptase (RT) activity and P24 antigen concentration. The results showed a superiority of the group M parental virus compared to group O for both markers. In contrast, for the recombinant virus, RT activity data did not overlap with the concentration of P24 antigen, suggesting a hybrid behavior of the recombinant, in terms of enzyme activity and P24 production. These results highlighted many hypotheses about the impact of recombination on replicative potential and demonstrated again the significant plasticity of HIV genomes and their infinite possibility of evolution., (© 2024. The Author(s).)- Published
- 2024
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227. Knowledge, attitudes and practices of French university students towards COVID-19 prevention-are health students better?
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Alessandri-Gradt E, Charbonnier C, Plantier JC, Marini H, Costa D, Gueit I, Etienne M, Caron F, Frebourg N, Unal G, Favennec L, and Merle V
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- Humans, SARS-CoV-2, Health Knowledge, Attitudes, Practice, Universities, Cross-Sectional Studies, Students, Surveys and Questionnaires, COVID-19 epidemiology, COVID-19 prevention & control
- Abstract
During the COVID-19 outbreak in 2020, public health measures (PHM) were implemented to prevent the spread of SARS-CoV-2. At university, we wondered whether health students would be more likely to comply with these safety measures against infectious disease transmission compared to other students. Thus, we collected 1 426 university students' responses to an online anonymous survey to describe their knowledge, attitudes and practices (KAP) of COVID-19 prevention measures and to compare the opinions and practices of health students and science students at the same university of Rouen Normandy (France). A higher proportion of science students (84.6%) compared to health students (73.9%) reported knowledge of the university's COVID-19 protocol, p<0.001. However, the health students compared to science students reported a higher compliance with PHM at home (91.4% vs 88.0%) and at university (94.1% vs 91.1%). In a multiple regression analysis, after adjustment for age, sex and university department, factors associated with higher compliance with PHM were knowledge of the university's COVID-19 protocol and a high perceived efficacy of PHM. A SARS-CoV-2 PCR result was not predictive of compliance with PHM. The results of this online survey in French students show a high level of knowledge and practices of COVID-19 prevention Although their performances could still be improved by training, the good results of health students regarding knowledge, attitudes and practices are encouraging as these students could be an added backup force to fight against viral pandemics., Competing Interests: The authors have declared that no competing interests exist., (Copyright: © 2023 Alessandri-Gradt et al. This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.)
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- 2023
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228. Are Confirmatory Assays Reliable for HIV-1/HIV-2 Infection Differentiation? A Multicenter Study.
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Guiraud V, Bocobza J, Desmonet M, Damond F, Plantier JC, Moreau G, Wirden M, Stefic K, Barin F, and Gautheret-Dejean A
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- Humans, HIV-2 genetics, Sensitivity and Specificity, HIV Antibodies, HIV-1, HIV Infections diagnosis, HIV Seropositivity
- Abstract
Immunoblots remain the gold standard for HIV-1/HIV-2 infection confirmation. However, their ability to differentiate HIV-1 from HIV-2 infection on an antigenically diversified HIV-1 and HIV-2 panel remain uncommon. We performed a multicenter study on 116 serum samples accounting for most of the diversity of HIV-1 (9 different subtypes in group M, 17 circulating recombinant forms (CRFs), and 3 group O) and HIV-2 (groups A and B), evaluating seven confirmatory assays (six commercially available assays and one in-house assay) with genotyping as the reference. The assays were INNO-LIA HIV I/II score, HIV-2 blot 1.2, HIV blot 2.2, New Lav blot I and II, Geenius, and an in-house serotyping enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA). Among the HIV-1 samples, INNO-LIA, HIV blot 2.2, New Lav blot I, Geenius, and serotyping had comparable high sensitivities, from 98% to 100%, whereas HIV-2 blot 1.2 and New Lav blot II had high rates of "undetermined" results (85% and 95%, respectively). HIV-2 blot 1.2 and New Lav blot II misclassified 7% and 5% of HIV-1 samples as HIV-2, respectively, and HIV-2 blot 1.2 had an 8% false-negative rate. Among the HIV-2 samples, INNO-LIA, New Lav blot II, HIV-2 blot 1.2, and serotyping had high sensitivities, from 96% to 100%. HIV blot 2.2 misclassified 17% of HIV-2 samples as HIV-1/HIV-2 dual infections. New Lav blot I misclassified 19% of HIV-2 samples as HIV-1 with a high (81%) undetermined rate, and Geenius misclassified 2% as HIV-1 and 7% as untypeable HIV positive. For HIV-1/HIV-2 dual infection, the results were less sensitive, with at most 87.5% for INNO-LIA and Geenius and 75% for HIV blot 2.2 and serotyping. Overall, confirmatory assays remain useful for most cases, with the exception of HIV-1/HIV-2 dual-infection suspicion., Competing Interests: The authors declare no conflict of interest.
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- 2023
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229. HIV-1 Non-Group M Strains and ART.
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Alessandri-Gradt E, Moisan A, and Plantier JC
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- Humans, Anti-Retroviral Agents therapeutic use, Genetic Drift, Viral Load, HIV Infections diagnosis, HIV Infections drug therapy, HIV Infections epidemiology, HIV-1 genetics, HIV Seropositivity, Anti-HIV Agents therapeutic use
- Abstract
To eliminate HIV infection, there are several elements to take into account to limit transmission and break viral replication, such as epidemiological, preventive or therapeutic management. The UNAIDS goals of screening, treatment and efficacy should allow for this elimination if properly followed. For some infections, the difficulty is linked to the strong genetic divergence of the viruses, which can impact the virological and therapeutic management of patients. To completely eliminate HIV by 2030, we must therefore also be able to act on these atypical variants (HIV-1 non-group M) which are distinct from the group M pandemic viruses. While this diversity has had an impact on the efficacy of antiretroviral treatment in the past, recent data show that there is real hope of eliminating these forms, while maintaining vigilance and constant surveillance, so as not to allow more divergent and resistant forms to emerge. The aim of this work is therefore to share an update on the current knowledge on epidemiology, diagnosis and antiretroviral agent efficacy of HIV-1 non-M variants., Competing Interests: The authors declare no conflict of interest.
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- 2023
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230. Evidence of Transmission and Circulation of Deltacron XD Recombinant Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome Coronavirus 2 in Northwest France.
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Moisan A, Mastrovito B, De Oliveira F, Martel M, Hedin H, Leoz M, Nesi N, Schaeffer J, Ar Gouilh M, and Plantier JC
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- Humans, France epidemiology, SARS-CoV-2 genetics, COVID-19
- Abstract
In February 2022, samples collected in northwest France showed discordant molecular results. After virological and epidemiological investigations, 17 cases of Deltacron XD recombinant severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 were confirmed by sequencing or suspected due to epidemiological links, showing evidence of an extended transmission event and circulation of this form, with low clinical severity., Competing Interests: Potential conflicts of interest . J. C. P. reports a grant to institution (CHU Rouen) from Fondation Charles Nicolle, unrelated to this work. All other authors report no potential conflicts. All authors have submitted the ICMJE Form for Disclosure of Potential Conflicts of Interest. Conflicts that the editors consider relevant to the content of the manuscript have been disclosed., (© The Author(s) 2022. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the Infectious Diseases Society of America. All rights reserved. For permissions, please e-mail: journals.permissions@oup.com.)
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- 2022
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231. Waning antibody response and cellular immunity 6 months after third dose SARS-Cov-2 mRNA BNT162b2 vaccine in kidney transplant recipients.
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Bertrand D, Lemée V, Laurent C, Lemoine M, Hanoy M, Le Roy F, Nezam D, Pruteanu D, Lebourg L, Grange S, Plantier JC, Boyer O, Guerrot D, and Candon S
- Subjects
- Antibodies, Viral blood, Humans, Immunization, Secondary, SARS-CoV-2, Transplant Recipients, Antibody Formation, BNT162 Vaccine administration & dosage, BNT162 Vaccine immunology, COVID-19 prevention & control, Immunity, Cellular, Kidney Transplantation
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- 2022
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232. Dissociated humoral and cellular immune responses after a three-dose schema of BNT162b2 vaccine in patients receiving anti-CD20 monoclonal antibody maintenance treatment for B-cell lymphomas.
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Candon S, Lemee V, Leveque E, Etancelin P, Paquin C, Carette M, Contentin N, Bobee V, Alani M, Cardinael N, Lepretre S, Camus V, Bouclet F, Boulet E, Menard AL, Lanic H, Stamatoullas A, Lemasle E, Pepin LF, Richard D, Dubois S, Tilly H, Dalleac A, Plantier JC, Etienne M, and Jardin F
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- Antibodies, Monoclonal therapeutic use, Antibodies, Viral, BNT162 Vaccine, Humans, Immunity, Cellular, Lymphoma, B-Cell drug therapy, Vaccines
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- 2022
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233. Investigation of outbreak cases infected with the SARS-CoV-2 B.1.640 variant in a fully vaccinated elderly population, Normandy, France, November to December 2021.
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Mastrovito B, Naimi C, Kouam L, Naudot X, Fournier L, Spaccaferri G, Plantier JC, Soares A, De Oliveira F, Gueudin M, Jacomo V, Leroy C, Moisan A, and Martel M
- Subjects
- Aged, Disease Outbreaks, France epidemiology, Humans, COVID-19, SARS-CoV-2
- Abstract
Three confirmed infections with the SARS-CoV-2 B.1.640 variant under monitoring were reported in Normandy, north-western France in late November 2021. Investigations led to the identification of two events linked to the same cluster. A total of 75 confirmed and probable B.1.640 cases were reported. All had completed the primary vaccination series. Sixty-two cases were older than 65 years. Fifty-six cases had symptoms and four were hospitalised. This investigation provides preliminary results concerning a variant with limited information currently available.
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- 2022
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234. Antibody and T-cell response to a third dose of SARS-CoV-2 mRNA BNT162b2 vaccine in kidney transplant recipients.
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Bertrand D, Hamzaoui M, Lemée V, Lamulle J, Laurent C, Etienne I, Lemoine M, Lebourg L, Hanoy M, Le Roy F, Nezam D, Farce F, Plantier JC, Boyer O, Guerrot D, and Candon S
- Subjects
- BNT162 Vaccine, COVID-19 Vaccines, Humans, RNA, Messenger genetics, SARS-CoV-2, T-Lymphocytes, Transplant Recipients, COVID-19, Kidney Transplantation adverse effects
- Published
- 2021
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235. Antibody and T Cell Response to SARS-CoV-2 Messenger RNA BNT162b2 Vaccine in Kidney Transplant Recipients and Hemodialysis Patients.
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Bertrand D, Hamzaoui M, Lemée V, Lamulle J, Hanoy M, Laurent C, Lebourg L, Etienne I, Lemoine M, Le Roy F, Nezam D, Plantier JC, Boyer O, Guerrot D, and Candon S
- Subjects
- Aged, BNT162 Vaccine, COVID-19 complications, COVID-19 prevention & control, COVID-19 Vaccines administration & dosage, Cohort Studies, Female, Humans, Immunocompromised Host, Immunosuppressive Agents adverse effects, Kidney Failure, Chronic complications, Kidney Failure, Chronic immunology, Kidney Failure, Chronic therapy, Male, Middle Aged, Pandemics, RNA, Messenger genetics, Retrospective Studies, SARS-CoV-2 genetics, Spike Glycoprotein, Coronavirus genetics, Spike Glycoprotein, Coronavirus immunology, Transplant Recipients, Antibodies, Viral biosynthesis, COVID-19 immunology, COVID-19 Vaccines pharmacology, Kidney Transplantation adverse effects, Renal Dialysis, SARS-CoV-2 immunology, T-Lymphocytes immunology
- Abstract
Background: Severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) is associated with a high rate of mortality in patients with ESKD, and vaccination is hoped to prevent infection., Methods: Between January 18 and February 24, 2021, 225 kidney transplant recipients (KTRs) and 45 patients on hemodialysis (HDPs) received two injections of mRNA BNT162b2 vaccine. The postvaccinal humoral and cellular response was explored in the first 45 KTRs and ten HDPs., Results: After the second dose, eight HDPs (88.9%) and eight KTRs (17.8%) developed antispike SARS-CoV-2 antibodies ( P <0.001). Median titers of antibodies in responders were 1052 AU/ml (IQR, 515-2689) in HDPs and 671 AU/ml (IQR, 172-1523) in KTRs ( P =0.40). Nine HDPs (100%) and 26 KTRs (57.8%) showed a specific T cell response ( P =0.06) after the second injection. In responders, median numbers of spike-reactive T cells were 305 SFCs per 10
6 CD3+ T cells (IQR, 95-947) in HDPs and 212 SFCs per 106 CD3+ T cells (IQR, 61-330) in KTRs ( P =0.40). In KTRs, the immune response to BNT162b2 seemed influenced by the immunosuppressive regimen, particularly tacrolimus or belatacept., Conclusion: Immunization with BNT162b2 seems more efficient in HDPs, indicating that vaccination should be highly recommended in these patients awaiting a transplant. However, the current vaccinal strategy for KTRs may not provide effective protection against COVID-19 and will likely need to be improved., (Copyright © 2021 by the American Society of Nephrology.)- Published
- 2021
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236. Assessment of Multiplex Digital Droplet RT-PCR as a Diagnostic Tool for SARS-CoV-2 Detection in Nasopharyngeal Swabs and Saliva Samples.
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Cassinari K, Alessandri-Gradt E, Chambon P, Charbonnier F, Gracias S, Beaussire L, Alexandre K, Sarafan-Vasseur N, Houdayer C, Etienne M, Caron F, Plantier JC, and Frebourg T
- Subjects
- COVID-19 blood, Humans, Limit of Detection, RNA, Viral blood, Reproducibility of Results, SARS-CoV-2 chemistry, Specimen Handling instrumentation, COVID-19 diagnosis, COVID-19 Nucleic Acid Testing methods, Nasopharynx virology, Reverse Transcriptase Polymerase Chain Reaction methods, Saliva virology
- Abstract
Background: Reverse transcription-quantitative PCR on nasopharyngeal swabs is currently the reference COVID-19 diagnosis method but exhibits imperfect sensitivity., Methods: We developed a multiplex reverse transcription-digital droplet PCR (RT-ddPCR) assay, targeting 6 SARS-CoV-2 genomic regions, and evaluated it on nasopharyngeal swabs and saliva samples collected from 130 COVID-19 positive or negative ambulatory individuals, who presented symptoms suggestive of mild or moderate SARS-CoV2 infection., Results: For the nasopharyngeal swab samples, the results obtained using the 6-plex RT-ddPCR and RT-qPCR assays were all concordant. The 6-plex RT-ddPCR assay was more sensitive than RT-qPCR (85% versus 62%) on saliva samples from patients with positive nasopharyngeal swabs., Conclusion: Multiplex RT-ddPCR represents an alternative and complementary tool for the diagnosis of COVID-19, in particular to control RT-qPCR ambiguous results. It can also be applied to saliva for repetitive sampling and testing individuals for whom nasopharyngeal swabbing is not possible., (© American Association for Clinical Chemistry 2021. All rights reserved. For permissions, please email: journals.permissions@oup.com.)
- Published
- 2021
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237. Differential utilization of CD4+ by transmitted/founder and chronic envelope glycoproteins in a MSM HIV-1 subtype B transmission cluster.
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Bouvin-Pley M, Leoz M, Roch E, Moreau A, Migraine J, Bellini N, Blake O, Mammano F, Braibant M, Plantier JC, and Brand D
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- Humans, Male, CD4-Positive T-Lymphocytes immunology, Glycoproteins genetics, Glycoproteins immunology, Glycoproteins metabolism, HIV Infections immunology, HIV Infections transmission, HIV Infections virology, HIV-1 genetics, HIV-1 immunology, HIV-1 metabolism, Homosexuality, Male, Viral Envelope Proteins genetics, Viral Envelope Proteins immunology, Viral Envelope Proteins metabolism
- Abstract
Objective: HIV-1 transmission leads to a genetic bottleneck, with one or a few variants of the donor quasispecies establishing an infection in the new host. We aimed to characterize this bottleneck in more detail, by comparing the properties of HIV envelope glycoproteins from acute and chronic infections within the particular context of a male-to-male transmission cluster., Design: We compared the genotypic and phenotypic properties of envelope glycoproteins from viral variants derived from five study participants from the same transmission cluster., Methods: We used single-genome amplification to generate a collection of full-length env sequences. We then constructed pseudotyped viruses expressing selected Env variants from the quasispecies infecting each study participant and compared their infectivities and sensitivities to various entry inhibitors., Results: The genotypic analyses confirmed the genetic bottleneck expected after HIV transmission, with a limited number of variants identified in four study participants during acute infection. However, the transmitted sequences harbored no evident common signature and belonged to various genetic lineages. The phenotypic analyses revealed no difference in infectivity, susceptibility to the CCR5 antagonist maraviroc, the fusion inhibitor enfurvitide or type-I interferon between viruses from participants with acute and chronic infections. The key property distinguishing transmitted viruses was a higher resistance to soluble CD4, correlated with greater sensitivity to occupation of the CD4 receptor by the anti-CD4 antibodies LM52 and SK3., Conclusion: These results suggest that envelope glycoproteins from transmitted/founder viruses bind CD4 less efficiently than those of viruses from chronic infections.
- Published
- 2020
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238. Dried Blood Spot Tests for the Diagnosis and Therapeutic Monitoring of HIV and Viral Hepatitis B and C.
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Tuaillon E, Kania D, Pisoni A, Bollore K, Taieb F, Ontsira Ngoyi EN, Schaub R, Plantier JC, Makinson A, and Van de Perre P
- Abstract
Blood collected and dried on a paper card - dried blood spot (DBS) - knows a growing interest as a sampling method that can be performed outside care facilities by capillary puncture, and transported in a simple and safe manner by mail. The benefits of this method for blood collection and transport has recently led the World Health Organization to recommend DBS for HIV and hepatitis B and C diagnosis. The clinical utility of DBS sampling to improve diagnostics and care of HIV and hepatitis B and C infection in hard to reach populations, key populations and people living in low-income settings was highlighted. Literature about usefulness of DBS specimens in the therapeutic cascade of care - screening, confirmation, quantification of nucleic acids, and resistance genotyping -, was reviewed. DBS samples are suitable for testing antibodies, antigens, or nucleic acids using most laboratory methods. Good sensibility and specificity have been reported for infant HIV diagnosis and diagnosis of hepatitis B and C. The performance of HIV RNA testing on DBS to identified virological failure on antiretroviral therapy is also high but not optimal because of the dilution of dried blood in the elution buffer, reducing the analytical sensitivity, and because of the contamination by intracellular HIV DNA. Standardized protocols are needed for inter-laboratory comparisons, and manufacturers should pursue regulatory approval for in vitro diagnostics using DBS specimens. Despite these limitations, DBS sampling is a clinically relevant tool to improve access to infectious disease diagnosis worldwide., (Copyright © 2020 Tuaillon, Kania, Pisoni, Bollore, Taieb, Ontsira Ngoyi, Schaub, Plantier, Makinson and Van de Perre.)
- Published
- 2020
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239. Surveillance of HIV-1 primary infections in France from 2014 to 2016: toward stable resistance, but higher diversity, clustering and virulence?
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Visseaux B, Assoumou L, Mahjoub N, Grude M, Trabaud MA, Raymond S, Wirden M, Morand-Joubert L, Roussel C, Montes B, Bocket L, Fafi-Kremer S, Amiel C, De Monte A, Stefic K, Pallier C, Tumiotto C, Maillard A, Vallet S, Ferre V, Bouvier-Alias M, Dina J, Signori-Schmuck A, Carles MJ, Plantier JC, Meyer L, Descamps D, and Chaix ML
- Subjects
- Adult, Anti-HIV Agents pharmacology, Anti-HIV Agents therapeutic use, Evolution, Molecular, Female, France epidemiology, Genotype, HIV Infections drug therapy, HIV Infections virology, HIV-1 drug effects, HIV-1 pathogenicity, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Mutation, Phylogeny, Sequence Analysis, DNA, Sexual and Gender Minorities, Viral Load, Virulence, Drug Resistance, Viral genetics, Epidemiological Monitoring, Genetic Variation, HIV Infections epidemiology, HIV-1 genetics
- Abstract
Objectives: Patients with primary HIV-1 infection (PHI) are a particular population, giving important insight about ongoing evolution of transmitted drug resistance-associated mutation (TDRAM) prevalence, HIV diversity and clustering patterns. We describe these evolutions of PHI patients diagnosed in France from 2014 to 2016., Methods: A total of 1121 PHI patients were included. TDRAMs were characterized using the 2009 Stanford list and the French ANRS algorithm. Viral subtypes and recent transmission clusters (RTCs) were also determined., Results: Patients were mainly MSM (70%) living in the Paris area (42%). TDRAMs were identified among 10.8% of patients and rose to 18.6% when including etravirine and rilpivirine TDRAMs. Prevalences of PI-, NRTI-, first-generation NNRTI-, second-generation NNRTI- and integrase inhibitor-associated TDRAMs were 2.9%, 5.0%, 4.0%, 9.4% and 5.4%, respectively. In a multivariable analysis, age >40 years and non-R5 tropic viruses were associated with a >2-fold increased risk of TDRAMs. Regarding HIV diversity, subtype B and CRF02_AG (where CRF stands for circulating recombinant form) were the two main lineages (56% and 20%, respectively). CRF02_AG was associated with higher viral load than subtype B (5.83 versus 5.40 log10 copies/mL, P=0.004). We identified 138 RTCs ranging from 2 to 14 patients and including overall 41% from the global population. Patients in RTCs were younger, more frequently born in France and more frequently MSM., Conclusions: Since 2007, the proportion of TDRAMs has been stable among French PHI patients. Non-B lineages are increasing and may be associated with more virulent CRF02_AG strains. The presence of large RTCs highlights the need for real-time cluster identification to trigger specific prevention action to achieve better control of the epidemic., (© The Author(s) 2019. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the British Society for Antimicrobial Chemotherapy. All rights reserved. For permissions, please email: journals.permissions@oup.com.)
- Published
- 2020
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240. New HIV-1 circulating recombinant form 94: from phylogenetic detection of a large transmission cluster to prevention in the age of geosocial-networking apps in France, 2013 to 2017.
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Wirden M, De Oliveira F, Bouvier-Alias M, Lambert-Niclot S, Chaix ML, Raymond S, Si-Mohammed A, Alloui C, André-Garnier E, Bellecave P, Malve B, Mirand A, Pallier C, Poveda JD, Rabenja T, Schneider V, Signori-Schmuck A, Stefic K, Calvez V, Descamps D, Plantier JC, Marcelin AG, and Visseaux B
- Subjects
- Adult, Cluster Analysis, DNA, Viral genetics, Disease Outbreaks prevention & control, Drug Resistance, Viral genetics, France epidemiology, HIV Infections epidemiology, HIV Infections prevention & control, HIV Infections virology, HIV-1 pathogenicity, Humans, Male, Online Social Networking, Phylogeography, Reverse Transcriptase Polymerase Chain Reaction, Sequence Alignment, Sexual and Gender Minorities statistics & numerical data, Viral Load, Viremia virology, Virulence, Whole Genome Sequencing, HIV Infections transmission, HIV-1 classification, HIV-1 genetics, Phylogeny, Recombination, Genetic
- Abstract
BackgroundEnding the HIV pandemic must involve new tools to rapidly identify and control local outbreaks and prevent the emergence of recombinant strains with epidemiological advantages.AimThis observational study aimed to investigate in France a cluster of HIV-1 cases related to a new circulating recombinant form (CRF). The confirmation this CRF's novelty as well as measures to control its spread are presented.MethodsPhylogenetic analyses of HIV sequences routinely generated for drug resistance genotyping before 2018 in French laboratories were employed to detect the transmission chain. The CRF involved was characterised by almost full-length viral sequencing for six cases. Cases' clinical data were reviewed. Where possible, epidemiological information was collected with a questionnaire.ResultsThe transmission cluster comprised 49 cases, mostly diagnosed in 2016-2017 (n = 37). All were infected with a new CRF, CRF94_cpx. The molecular proximity of this CRF to X4 strains and the high median viraemia, exceeding 5.0 log
10 copies/mL, at diagnosis, even in chronic infection, raise concerns of enhanced virulence. Overall, 41 cases were diagnosed in the Ile-de-France region and 45 were men who have sex with men. Among 24 cases with available information, 20 reported finding partners through a geosocial networking app. Prevention activities in the area and population affected were undertaken.ConclusionWe advocate the systematic use of routinely generated HIV molecular data by a dedicated reactive network, to improve and accelerate targeted prevention interventions. Geosocial networking apps can play a role in the spread of outbreaks, but could also deliver local targeted preventive alerts.- Published
- 2019
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241. Virological response to integrase strand transfer inhibitor-based antiretroviral combinations in HIV-1 group O-infected patients.
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Alessandri-Gradt E, Unal G, Leoz M, and Plantier JC
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Adult, Aged, Drug Resistance, Viral, Female, HIV Integrase genetics, HIV-1 classification, HIV-1 genetics, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Mutation, Treatment Outcome, Viral Load, Young Adult, Anti-Retroviral Agents therapeutic use, Antiretroviral Therapy, Highly Active methods, Genotype, HIV Infections drug therapy, HIV Integrase Inhibitors therapeutic use, HIV-1 isolation & purification
- Abstract
: Although integrase strand transfer inhibitors (INSTIs) are widely used in HIV-1 group M (HIV-1/M) infections, little is known about their efficacy against genetically divergent HIV-1 group O (HIV-1/O) strains. Previous phenotypic works have demonstrated the variable susceptibility of HIV-1/O strains, depending on INSTI drugs. Clinical data are very limited and obtained from a few patients., Objectives: To investigate the virological success rate of an INSTI-based combination of antiretroviral therapy (cART) in a large population of HIV-1/O-infected patients, and to describe resistance-associated mutations (RAM) at virological failure., Methods: The virological response of 39 patients receiving INSTI-based cART during their follow-up was analysed i) at the last point of the first INSTI initiation and ii) at their most recent visit. RAM analysis was performed at virological failures. Resistance interpretation was based on the French National Agency of Research on AIDS and viral hepatitis (ANRS) rules., Results: Virological success at both time points of analysis was high, with more than 87% of the patients with undetectable plasma viral load. Among the six patients with virological failure, three selected RAM described for HIV-1/M resistance, and two had already RAM, before INSTI initiation., Conclusion: Our results show that HIV-1/O infected patients receiving INSTI-based cART presented a high rate of virological success whatever their previous lines; we have also shown that resistance rules for HIV-1/M could be considered when failure occurs. These data are of importance especially in the context of WHO recommendations for a wider use of this class.
- Published
- 2019
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242. Stable prevalence of transmitted drug resistance mutations and increased circulation of non-B subtypes in antiretroviral-naive chronically HIV-infected patients in 2015/2016 in France.
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Assoumou L, Bocket L, Pallier C, Grude M, Ait-Namane R, Izopet J, Raymond S, Charpentier C, Visseaux B, Wirden M, Trabaud MA, Le Guillou-Guillemette H, Allaoui C, Henquell C, Krivine A, Dos Santos G, Delamare C, Bouvier-Alias M, Montes B, Ferre V, De Monte A, Signori-Schmuck A, Maillard A, Morand-Joubert L, Tumiotto C, Fafi-Kremer S, Amiel C, Barin F, Marque-Juillet S, Courdavault L, Vallet S, Beby-Defaux A, de Rougemont A, Fenaux H, Avettand-Fenoel V, Allardet-Servent A, Plantier JC, Peytavin G, Calvez V, Chaix ML, and Descamps D
- Subjects
- Adult, CD4 Lymphocyte Count, Chronic Disease epidemiology, Female, France epidemiology, Genotype, HIV Infections drug therapy, HIV Infections epidemiology, HIV Seropositivity epidemiology, HIV-1 classification, HIV-1 drug effects, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Prevalence, RNA, Viral blood, Anti-HIV Agents therapeutic use, Drug Resistance, Viral genetics, HIV Infections transmission, HIV-1 genetics, Mutation
- Abstract
Objectives: We estimated the prevalence of transmitted-drug-resistance-associated mutations (TDRAMs) in antiretroviral-naive chronically HIV-1-infected patients., Patients and Methods: TDRAMs were sought in samples from 660 diagnosed HIV-1-infected individuals in 2015/2016 in 33 HIV clinical centres. Weighted analyses, considering the number of patients followed in each centre, were used to derive representative estimates of the percentage of individuals with TDRAMs. Results were compared with those of the 2010/2011 survey (n = 661) using the same methodology., Results: At inclusion, median CD4 cell counts and plasma HIV-1 RNA were 394 and 350/mm3 (P = 0.056) and 4.6 and 4.6 log10 copies/mL (P = 0.360) in the 2010/2011 survey and the 2015/2016 survey, respectively. The frequency of non-B subtypes increased from 42.9% in 2010/2011 to 54.8% in 2015/2016 (P < 0.001), including 23.4% and 30.6% of CRF02_AG (P = 0.004). The prevalence of virus with protease or reverse-transcriptase TDRAMs was 9.0% (95% CI = 6.8-11.2) in 2010/2011 and 10.8% (95% CI = 8.4-13.2) in 2015/2016 (P = 0.269). No significant increase was observed in integrase inhibitor TDRAMs (6.7% versus 9.2%, P = 0.146). Multivariable analysis showed that men infected with the B subtype were the group with the highest risk of being infected with a resistant virus compared with others (adjusted OR = 2.2, 95% CI = 1.3-3.9)., Conclusions: In France in 2015/2016, the overall prevalence of TDRAMs was 10.8% and stable compared with 9.0% in the 2010/2011 survey. Non-B subtypes dramatically increased after 2010. Men infected with B subtype were the group with the highest risk of being infected with a resistant virus, highlighting the need to re-emphasize safe sex messages., (© The Author(s) 2019. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the British Society for Antimicrobial Chemotherapy. All rights reserved. For permissions, please email: journals.permissions@oup.com.)
- Published
- 2019
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243. Detection of numerous HIV-1/MO recombinants in France.
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De Oliveira F, Cappy P, Lemée V, Moisan A, Pronier C, Bocket L, Bouvier-Alias M, Chaix ML, Gault E, Morvan O, Poveda JD, Schneider V, Wirden M, Alessandri-Gradt E, Mourez T, and Plantier JC
- Subjects
- Adult, Evolution, Molecular, Female, France, Genotyping Techniques, HIV Infections pathology, HIV-1 isolation & purification, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Sequence Analysis, DNA, Serotyping, Viral Load, Genetic Variation, HIV Infections virology, HIV-1 classification, HIV-1 genetics, Recombination, Genetic
- Abstract
Background: The broad genetic divergence of HIV-1/O relative to HIV-1/M has important implications for diagnosis, monitoring and treatment. Despite this divergence, some HIV-1/M+O dual infections and HIV-1/MO recombinant forms have been reported, mostly in Cameroon, where both groups are prevalent. Here, we describe the characteristics of such infections detected in France in 10 new patients, and discuss their implications for biological and clinical practice, owing to the presence of group O species., Methods: The French National Reference Centre for HIV received samples within the framework of mandatory notification of HIV infections, and for expert analysis. A strategy combining serotyping, viral quantification, group-specific molecular amplification and whole-genome sequencing was used for strain characterization and complementary investigations., Results: We identified one patient with M+O infection, three patients with M+O infection associated with an MO recombinant, and six patients with only an MO recombinant. These atypical infections were detected upon strain characterization (n = 4) or because of anomalies during patient monitoring (n = 6). We identified eight new URF_MO, all but one originating from Cameroon. Interestingly, two distinct recombinant strains were found in two unrelated patients, representing possible precursors of a CRF_MO., Conclusion: Our work highlights the fact that the continuous evolution of HIV can hinder diagnosis and complicate clinical practice. We stress that unexpected results during diagnosis or monitoring necessitate further serological and molecular exploration, these atypical infections influence biological and therapeutic management and necessitate appropriate tools, and specific surveillance is necessary, especially as the frequency of such infections may be underestimated.
- Published
- 2018
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244. HIV-1 group P infection: towards a dead-end infection?
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Alessandri-Gradt E, De Oliveira F, Leoz M, Lemee V, Robertson DL, Feyertag F, Ngoupo PA, Mauclere P, Simon F, and Plantier JC
- Subjects
- Adaptation, Biological, Blood virology, CD4 Lymphocyte Count, Cells, Cultured, Follow-Up Studies, Genotyping Techniques, HIV Infections drug therapy, HIV Infections pathology, HIV-1 isolation & purification, HIV-1 pathogenicity, Humans, Leukocytes, Mononuclear virology, Mutation, Missense, Prospective Studies, Serotyping, Viral Load, Virulence, Virus Cultivation, gag Gene Products, Human Immunodeficiency Virus genetics, Genotype, HIV Infections virology, HIV-1 classification, HIV-1 genetics
- Abstract
Objectives: HIV/1 group P (HIV-1/P) is the last HIV/1 group discovered and, to date, constitutes only two strains. To obtain new insight into this divergent group, we screened for new infections by developing specific tools, and analysed phenotypic and genotypic properties of the prototypic strain RBF168. In addition, the follow-up of the unique infected patient monitored so far has raised the knowledge of the natural history of this infection and its therapeutic management., Design/methods: We developed an HIV-1/P specific seromolecular strategy and screened over 29 498 specimen samples. Infectivity and evolution of the gag-30 position, considered as marker of adaptation to human, were explored by successive passages of RBF168 strain onto human peripheral blood mononuclear cells. Natural history and immunovirological responses to combined antiretroviral therapy (cART) were analysed based on CD4+ cells and plasmatic viral load evolution., Results: No new infection was detected. Infectivity of RBF168 was found lower, relative to other main HIV groups and the conservative methionine found in the gag-30 position revealed a lack of adaptation to human. The follow-up of the patient during the 5-year ART-free period, showed a relative stability of CD4+ cell count with a mean of 326 cells/μl. Initiation of cART led to rapid RNA undetectability with a significant increase of CD4+ cells, reaching 687 cells/μl after 8 years., Conclusion: Our results showed that HIV-1/P strains remain extremely rare and could be less adapted and pathogenic than other HIV strains. These data lead to the hypothesis that HIV-1/P infection could evolve towards, or even already corresponds to, a dead-end infection.
- Published
- 2018
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245. Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1 Group O Infection in France: Clinical Features and Immunovirological Response to Antiretrovirals.
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Unal G, Alessandri-Gradt E, Leoz M, Pavie J, Lefèvre C, Panjo H, Charpentier C, Descamps D, Barin F, Simon F, Meyer L, and Plantier JC
- Subjects
- Adult, CD4 Lymphocyte Count, Female, France epidemiology, Genetic Variation, HIV Infections epidemiology, HIV-1 genetics, HIV-1 pathogenicity, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Viral Load, Anti-HIV Agents therapeutic use, HIV Infections drug therapy, HIV Infections virology, HIV-1 classification
- Abstract
Background: To obtain reliable clinical data of human immunodeficiency virus type 1 group O (HIV-1/O) infection, and immunovirological responses to combination antiretroviral therapy (cART), in a large series of 101 patients., Methods: Piecewise linear models were used to estimate CD4 count before and after cART initiation. Kaplan-Meier survival curves were used to estimate time to reach clinical stage C before antiretroviral therapy (ART) and to analyze time to achieve a plasma viral load (pVL) <40 copies/mL following cART initiation. Immunovirological response was assessed at the most recent visit in patients on active follow-up., Results: Data showed a 16.6% cumulative probability of reaching stage C within 5 years following diagnosis, and a mean CD4 decrease of -30.5 cells/μL/year. cART initiation in ART-naive patients led to a mean CD4 gain of 147 cells/μL after 12 months, and to a median pVL of <40 copies/mL after 3.8 months for 89.3%. Initiation with a nonrecommended nonnucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitor-based vs a ritonavir-boosted protease inhibitor-based regimen resulted in a much smaller gain of around 100 CD4 cells/μL after 1 year. Patients on follow-up since 2007 had a median CD4 count of 498 cells/μL, and 87% had a pVL <40 copies/mL at the most recent follow-up visit., Conclusions: This work provides unique data on HIV-1/O infection, in favor of a milder natural evolution than HIV-1 group M (HIV-1/M) and of a highly efficient current management, based on HIV-1/M guidelines, despite genetic divergence. Studies of comparable HIV-1/M and HIV-1/O populations are needed to confirm these results.
- Published
- 2018
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246. Massive Iatrogenic Outbreak of Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1 in Rural Cambodia, 2014-2015.
- Author
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Rouet F, Nouhin J, Zheng DP, Roche B, Black A, Prak S, Leoz M, Gaudy-Graffin C, Ferradini L, Mom C, Mam S, Gautier C, Lesage G, Ken S, Phon K, Kerleguer A, Yang C, Killam W, Fujita M, Mean C, Fontenille D, Barin F, Plantier JC, Bedford T, Ramos A, and Saphonn V
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Adult, Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Cambodia epidemiology, Case-Control Studies, Child, Child, Preschool, Female, HIV-1, Humans, Iatrogenic Disease epidemiology, Male, Middle Aged, Phylogeny, Rural Population, Young Adult, Disease Outbreaks, HIV Infections epidemiology, HIV Infections etiology, Injections adverse effects
- Abstract
Background: In 2014-2015, 242 individuals aged 2-89 years were newly diagnosed with human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) in Roka, a rural commune in Cambodia. A case-control study attributed the outbreak to unsafe injections. We aimed to reconstruct the likely transmission history of the outbreak., Methods: We assessed in 209 (86.4%) HIV-infected cases the presence of hepatitis C virus (HCV) and hepatitis B virus (HBV). We identified recent infections using antibody (Ab) avidity testing for HIV and HCV. We performed amplification, sequencing, and evolutionary phylogenetic analyses of viral strains. Geographical coordinates and parenteral exposure through medical services provided by an unlicensed healthcare practitioner were obtained from 193 cases and 1499 controls during interviews., Results: Cases were coinfected with HCV (78.5%) and HBV (12.9%). We identified 79 (37.8%) recent (<130 days) HIV infections. Phylogeny of 202 HIV env C2V3 sequences showed a 198-sample CRF01_AE strains cluster, with time to most recent common ancestor (tMRCA) in September 2013 (95% highest posterior density, August 2012-July 2014), and a peak of 15 infections/day in September 2014. Three geospatial HIV hotspots were discernible in Roka and correlated with high exposure to the practitioner (P = .04). Fifty-nine of 153 (38.6%) tested cases showed recent (<180 days) HCV infections. Ninety HCV NS5B sequences formed 3 main clades, 1 containing 34 subtypes 1b with tMRCA in 2012, and 2 with 51 subtypes 6e and tMRCAs in 2002-2003., Conclusions: Unsafe injections in Cambodia most likely led to an explosive iatrogenic spreading of HIV, associated with a long-standing and more genetically diverse HCV propagation.
- Published
- 2018
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247. Interlaboratory quality control of total HIV-1 DNA load measurement for multicenter reservoir studies.
- Author
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Gantner P, Mélard A, Damond F, Delaugerre C, Dina J, Gueudin M, Maillard A, Sauné K, Rodallec A, Tuaillon E, Plantier JC, Rouzioux C, and Avettand-Fenoel V
- Subjects
- Clinical Laboratory Techniques methods, Disease Reservoirs virology, HIV-1 genetics, Humans, Intersectoral Collaboration, RNA, Viral blood, Real-Time Polymerase Chain Reaction methods, Reproducibility of Results, Clinical Laboratory Techniques standards, DNA, Viral analysis, HIV-1 isolation & purification, HIV-1 physiology, Quality Control, Real-Time Polymerase Chain Reaction standards, Viral Load standards
- Abstract
Background: Viral reservoirs represent an important barrier to HIV cure. Accurate markers of HIV reservoirs are needed to develop multicenter studies. The aim of this multicenter quality control (QC) was to evaluate the inter-laboratory reproducibility of total HIV-1-DNA quantification., Methods: Ten laboratories of the ANRS-AC11 working group participated by quantifying HIV-DNA with a real-time qPCR assay (Biocentric) in four samples (QCMD)., Results: Good reproducibility was found between laboratories (standard deviation ≤ 0.2 log
10 copies/106 PBMC) for the three positive QC that were correctly classified by each laboratory (QC1- Published
- 2017
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248. Origin, diffusion and evolution of HIV-1 group O viruses.
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Leoz M, De Oliveira F, and Plantier JC
- Abstract
HIV-1 group O (HIV-1/O) are rare variants that are mainly found in Cameroon, where they have caused several thousand cases. The reasons for their limited diffusion remain poorly understood: their emergence is estimated to have been as long ago as that of the HIV-1/M pandemic, and old cases of exportation to different continents have been identified for both groups. In France, more than a hundred cases have been identified thus far, mostly linked to Cameroon. HIV-1/O have developed a high level of genetic diversity and an atypical phylogenetic structure, for which the description has remained ambiguous due to the existence of several nomenclatures. These have only recently been unified by taking the evolutionary history of the viruses into account. Their high genetic diversity and divergence from HIV-1/M likely affects diverse properties of the strains, such as their ability to counteract the action of tetherin. Further studies of the epidemiological, evolutionary, and virological characteristics of these variants will allow a better understanding of the reasons for their limited spread and the future of the epidemic. In this respect, the recent description of diverse M/O intergroup recombinants highlights their evolutionary potential.
- Published
- 2017
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249. First report of transmission of a highly resistant strain of HIV-1 group O.
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Unal G, Mourez T, Leoz M, Alessandri-Gradt E, Le Guillou-Guillemette H, Chennebault JM, Depatureaux A, Meyer L, and Plantier JC
- Subjects
- Fatal Outcome, Female, Genetic Association Studies, HIV Infections drug therapy, HIV Reverse Transcriptase genetics, HIV-1 drug effects, HIV-1 genetics, Humans, Male, Peptide Hydrolases genetics, Phylogeny, Spouses, Anti-HIV Agents therapeutic use, Drug Resistance, Multiple, Viral genetics, HIV Infections transmission, HIV Infections virology, HIV-1 classification
- Published
- 2016
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250. First evidence of transmission of an HIV-1 M/O intergroup recombinant virus.
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Ngoupo PA, Sadeuh-Mba SA, De Oliveira F, Ngono V, Ngono L, Tchendjou P, Penlap V, Mourez T, Njouom R, Kfutwah A, and Plantier JC
- Subjects
- Adult, Cameroon, Female, Genome, Viral, Genotyping Techniques, HIV-1 isolation & purification, Humans, Male, Phylogeny, Polymerase Chain Reaction, Recombination, Genetic, Sequence Analysis, DNA, Serotyping, Spouses, env Gene Products, Human Immunodeficiency Virus genetics, Genotype, HIV Infections transmission, HIV Infections virology, HIV-1 classification, HIV-1 genetics, Serogroup
- Abstract
Objective: Despite the genetic divergence between HIV-1 groups M and O, HIV-1 M/O intergroup recombinants were reported. Actually, there is no data on the transmissibility of such recombinant forms. During a surveillance of HIV genetic diversity in Cameroon, we investigated the possible direct transmission of an HIV-1 M/O recombinant virus in an HIV-infected couple., Methods: Consecutive samples obtained from the couple were analysed for detection of dual HIV-1 groups M and O infections, and HIV-1 M/O recombinant forms. Analyses were performed using a serological and molecular algorithm based on HIV serotyping and group-specific PCRs targeting the polymerase and envelope genes. Pattern characterization of the strains found in both patients was based on complete genome sequencing. Phylogenetic and similarity profile analyses were performed to investigate the genetic relationship between viruses from both spouses and the previously described recombinant forms., Results: The sero-molecular algorithm data showed a group O serotype confirmed by molecular analysis in the envelope regions, whereas molecular tests identified HIV-1 group M in the polymerase. Phylogenetic analyses and similarity profiles of the full-length genome sequences showed that both spouses were infected with a unique recombinant virus having two recombination breakpoints in the vpr gene and LTR region. No phylogenetic link was found with the previous M/O recombinants., Conclusion: We provide, for the first time, molecular evidence of direct transmission of an HIV-1 M/O recombinant, highlighting the potential spread of these divergent viruses. The importance of HIV-1 recombination on genetic evolution and public health when implying divergent strains as group O has to be carefully considered.
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
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