Background Monitoring HIV-1 subtype circulation and transmitted drug resistance (TDR) remains a key priority, particularly since the rollout of high-sensitivity next-generation sequencing (NGS). Methods Routine plasma HIV-1 RNA NGS genotyping data were collected from newly diagnosed individuals in Italy over 2022-24. HIV-1 TDR and genotypic susceptibility were evaluated through HIVdb with NGS set at 10% and 20%. Subtype and transmission clusters (TC) were determined through the maximum likelihood phylogeny based on the GTR + F + R9 model. Results Seven hundred and forty-two individuals were included, 51.9% harbouring non-B strains [CRF02_AG (18.1%); CRF BF (6.1%); A1/A3/A6 (7.1%); others (20.5%)]. TDR prevalence to any class was 11.7% at Sanger-like NGS-setting (>20%), slightly increased (15.0%) at 10% NGS-setting, and significantly varied across subtypes, with the highest prevalence observed in B subtype. Most antiretrovirals showed full genotypic activity in nearly 99% of individuals, except for efavirenz and rilpivirine (proportion of individuals with full activity <92%). A total of 57 TC were detected: 40 pairs, 17 clusters (>2 sequences). Thirteen TC (22.8%, 8 pairs, 5 clusters) involved individuals harbouring TDR. TDR was detected as minority mutations in five TC. Conclusions A high proportion of HIV-1 non-B subtypes circulate in Italy. TDR prevalence is around 12% using NGS at Sanger-like threshold and moderately increases to 15% when NGS is set at 10%. However, the impact of the detected TDR on the susceptibility to currently used antiretrovirals in clinical practice is negligible
Armenia, D., Alteri, C., Micheli, V., Allice, T., Bonura, C., Bruzzone, B., et al. (2026). Evaluation of HIV-1 transmitted drug-resistance among subtypes circulating from 2022 to 2024 in Italy: a refined analysis through next-generation sequencing. JOURNAL OF ANTIMICROBIAL CHEMOTHERAPY, 81(4), 1-16 [10.1093/jac/dkag084].
Evaluation of HIV-1 transmitted drug-resistance among subtypes circulating from 2022 to 2024 in Italy: a refined analysis through next-generation sequencing
Armenia, Daniele;Alteri, Claudia;Cerutti, Francesco;Bertoli, Ada;Ceccherini-Silberstein, Francesca;Santoro, Maria
2026-03-04
Abstract
Background Monitoring HIV-1 subtype circulation and transmitted drug resistance (TDR) remains a key priority, particularly since the rollout of high-sensitivity next-generation sequencing (NGS). Methods Routine plasma HIV-1 RNA NGS genotyping data were collected from newly diagnosed individuals in Italy over 2022-24. HIV-1 TDR and genotypic susceptibility were evaluated through HIVdb with NGS set at 10% and 20%. Subtype and transmission clusters (TC) were determined through the maximum likelihood phylogeny based on the GTR + F + R9 model. Results Seven hundred and forty-two individuals were included, 51.9% harbouring non-B strains [CRF02_AG (18.1%); CRF BF (6.1%); A1/A3/A6 (7.1%); others (20.5%)]. TDR prevalence to any class was 11.7% at Sanger-like NGS-setting (>20%), slightly increased (15.0%) at 10% NGS-setting, and significantly varied across subtypes, with the highest prevalence observed in B subtype. Most antiretrovirals showed full genotypic activity in nearly 99% of individuals, except for efavirenz and rilpivirine (proportion of individuals with full activity <92%). A total of 57 TC were detected: 40 pairs, 17 clusters (>2 sequences). Thirteen TC (22.8%, 8 pairs, 5 clusters) involved individuals harbouring TDR. TDR was detected as minority mutations in five TC. Conclusions A high proportion of HIV-1 non-B subtypes circulate in Italy. TDR prevalence is around 12% using NGS at Sanger-like threshold and moderately increases to 15% when NGS is set at 10%. However, the impact of the detected TDR on the susceptibility to currently used antiretrovirals in clinical practice is negligible| File | Dimensione | Formato | |
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