BACKGROUND:: Scale-up to antiretroviral therapy (ART) requires surveillance for HIV drug resistance. With the goal of attaining 100% pediatric ART coverage in Cameroon, strategies to limit the spread of HIV resistance among children are very important. METHODS:: From June 2009 through February 2011, 92 HIV-1-infected children (41 ART-naive, 51 failing first-line ART) living in Yaoundé, Cameroon, were enrolled; HIV-1 Prot-RT genotypic resistance testing (GRT) was performed using an inhouse assay. Among 40 children failing first-line ART, treatment response was evaluated at weeks 24 and 48 after treatment was changed, based on GRT results. RESULTS:: The mean age was 72 months both for children who were drug-naive and those failing ART (range: 3-144 and 12-144, respectively), with a mean viremia of 5.59 log and 4.71 log RNA copies/mL, a median CD4 of 17% (588 cells/μL) and 23% (719 cells/μL), respectively. Median time-to-treatment failure was 610 days. A prevalence of 4.9% and 90% drug resistance was observed, respectively, among children who were drug-naive and those failing first-line ART, with circulating recombinant form CRF02_AG as the most prevalent clade (58.6% and 62%, respectively). After a change to GRT-based treatment, more than 90% of children had viremia <3 log RNA copies/mL at week 24 and confirmed at week 48, with 70% achieving undetectable viremia, although without correlation to immune response; 97.5% had switched to lopinavir/ritonavir-containing regimens. CONCLUSION:: HIV-1 drug resistance was low among ART-naive children and very high among those failing first-line ART. Treatment change based on GRT was successful for most children, with lopinavir/ritonavir regimens being very promising for second-line use.

Fokam, J., Salpini, R., Santoro, M., Cento, V., Perno, C.f., Colizzi, V., et al. (2011). Drug Resistance Among Drug-naive and First-line Antiretroviral Treatment-failing Children in Cameroon. THE PEDIATRIC INFECTIOUS DISEASE JOURNAL [10.1097/INF.0b013e31822db54c].

Drug Resistance Among Drug-naive and First-line Antiretroviral Treatment-failing Children in Cameroon

Salpini, R;SANTORO, MARIA;PERNO, CARLO FEDERICO;COLIZZI, VITTORIO;
2011-08-03

Abstract

BACKGROUND:: Scale-up to antiretroviral therapy (ART) requires surveillance for HIV drug resistance. With the goal of attaining 100% pediatric ART coverage in Cameroon, strategies to limit the spread of HIV resistance among children are very important. METHODS:: From June 2009 through February 2011, 92 HIV-1-infected children (41 ART-naive, 51 failing first-line ART) living in Yaoundé, Cameroon, were enrolled; HIV-1 Prot-RT genotypic resistance testing (GRT) was performed using an inhouse assay. Among 40 children failing first-line ART, treatment response was evaluated at weeks 24 and 48 after treatment was changed, based on GRT results. RESULTS:: The mean age was 72 months both for children who were drug-naive and those failing ART (range: 3-144 and 12-144, respectively), with a mean viremia of 5.59 log and 4.71 log RNA copies/mL, a median CD4 of 17% (588 cells/μL) and 23% (719 cells/μL), respectively. Median time-to-treatment failure was 610 days. A prevalence of 4.9% and 90% drug resistance was observed, respectively, among children who were drug-naive and those failing first-line ART, with circulating recombinant form CRF02_AG as the most prevalent clade (58.6% and 62%, respectively). After a change to GRT-based treatment, more than 90% of children had viremia <3 log RNA copies/mL at week 24 and confirmed at week 48, with 70% achieving undetectable viremia, although without correlation to immune response; 97.5% had switched to lopinavir/ritonavir-containing regimens. CONCLUSION:: HIV-1 drug resistance was low among ART-naive children and very high among those failing first-line ART. Treatment change based on GRT was successful for most children, with lopinavir/ritonavir regimens being very promising for second-line use.
3-ago-2011
Pubblicato
Rilevanza internazionale
Articolo
Sì, ma tipo non specificato
Settore MED/07 - MICROBIOLOGIA E MICROBIOLOGIA CLINICA
Settore MED/04 - PATOLOGIA GENERALE
English
Con Impact Factor ISI
Fokam, J., Salpini, R., Santoro, M., Cento, V., Perno, C.f., Colizzi, V., et al. (2011). Drug Resistance Among Drug-naive and First-line Antiretroviral Treatment-failing Children in Cameroon. THE PEDIATRIC INFECTIOUS DISEASE JOURNAL [10.1097/INF.0b013e31822db54c].
Fokam, J; Salpini, R; Santoro, M; Cento, V; Perno, Cf; Colizzi, V; Ndumbe, P; Fokunang Ntungen, C; Ndiang Tetang, S; Nanfack, A; Takou Komego, D; Cappelli, G
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/2108/18068
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