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Prevalence of doravirine-associated resistance mutations in HIV-1-infected antiretroviral-experienced patients from two large databases in France and Italy.

Authors :
Soulie, Cathia
Santoro, Maria Mercedes
Storto, Alexandre
Abdi, Basma
Charpentier, Charlotte
Armenia, Daniele
Jary, Aude
Forbici, Federica
Bertoli, Ada
Gennari, William
Andreoni, Massimo
Mussini, Cristina
Antinori, Andrea
Perno, Carlo Federico
Calvez, Vincent
Ceccherini-Silberstein, Francesca
Descamps, Diane
Marcelin, Anne-Genevieve
Source :
Journal of Antimicrobial Chemotherapy (JAC). Apr2020, Vol. 75 Issue 4, p1026-1030. 5p.
Publication Year :
2020

Abstract

<bold>Objectives: </bold>Doravirine, a novel NNRTI, selects for specific mutations in vitro, including mutations at reverse transcriptase (RT) positions 106, 108, 188, 227, 230 and 234. The aim of this study was to examine the prevalence of doravirine-associated resistance mutations in HIV-1-infected antiretroviral-experienced patients.<bold>Methods: </bold>Doravirine-associated resistance mutations identified in vitro or in vivo were studied in a set of 9199 HIV-1 RT sequences from HIV-1 antiretroviral-experienced patients, including 381 NNRTI-failing patients in France and Italy between 2012 and 2017. The following mutations were considered as resistance mutations: V106A/M, V108I, Y188L, G190S, F227C/L/V, M230I/L, L234I, P236L, K103N + Y181C, K103N + P225H and K103N + L100I.<bold>Results: </bold>The frequencies of doravirine-associated resistance mutations (total dataset versus NNRTI-failing patients) were: V106A/M, 0.8% versus 2.6%; V108I, 3.3% versus 9.2%; Y188L, 1.2% versus 2.6%; G190S, 0.3% versus 2.1%; F227C/L/V, 0.5% versus 1.8%; M230I/L, 2.8% versus 0%; L234I, 0.1% versus 0.5%; K103N + Y181C, 3.9% versus 3.9%; K103N + P225H, 2.9% versus 4.7%; and K103N + L100I, 1.7% versus 3.9%, with a significantly higher proportion of these mutations in the NNRTI-failing group (P < 0.05), except for M230I/L and K103N + Y181C. The overall prevalence of sequences with at least one doravirine-associated resistance mutation was 12.2% and 34.9% in the total dataset and NNRTI-failing patients (P < 0.001), respectively. In comparison, the prevalence of the common NNRTI mutations V90I, K101E/P, K103N/S, E138A/G/K/Q/R/S, Y181C/I/V and G190A/E/S/Q were higher (8.9%, 7.9%, 28.6%, 12.6%, 14.2% and 8.9%, respectively).<bold>Conclusions: </bold>These results suggest that doravirine resistance in antiretroviral-experienced patients generally and specifically among NNRTI-failing patients is lower than resistance to other NNRTIs currently used, confirming its distinguishing resistance pattern. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
03057453
Volume :
75
Issue :
4
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Journal of Antimicrobial Chemotherapy (JAC)
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
142279742
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1093/jac/dkz553