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    Risk of Drug Resistance Among Persons Acquiring HIV Within a Randomized Clinical Trial of Single- or Dual-Agent Preexposure Prophylaxis

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    Date
    2015
    Author
    Baeten, Jared M.
    Connor, O. McCoy
    Julie, F. Weis
    Dylan, Peterson
    Mbara, Gerald
    Deborah, Donnell
    Weis, Julie F.
    Dylan, Peterson
    Gerald, Mbara
    Deborah, Donnell
    Katherine, K. Thomas
    Craig, W. Hendrix
    Mark, A. Marzinke
    Lisa, Frenkel
    Ndase, Patrick
    Mugo, Nelly R.
    Celum, Connie
    Julie, Overbaugh
    Frederick, A. Matsen
    Type
    Article; en
    Language
    en
    Metadata
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    Abstract
    Background. Preexposure prophylaxis (PrEP) with emtricitabine plus tenofovir disoproxil fumarate (FTC/TDF) or TDF alone reduces the risk of human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) acquisition. Understanding the risk of antiretroviral resistance selected by PrEP during breakthrough infections is important because of the risk of treatment failure during subsequent antiretroviral use. Methods. Within the largest randomized trial of FTC/TDF versus TDF as PrEP, plasma samples were tested for HIV with resistance mutations associated with FTC (K65R and M184IV) and TDF (K65R and K70E), using 454 sequencing. Results. Of 121 HIV seroconverters, 25 received FTC/TDF, 38 received TDF, and 58 received placebo. Plasma drug levels in 26 individuals indicated PrEP use during or after HIV acquisition, of which 5 had virus with resistance mutations associated with their PrEP regimen. Among those with PrEP drug detected during infection, resistance was more frequent in the FTC/TDF arm (4 of 7 [57%]), compared with the TDF arm (1 of 19 [5.3%]; P = .01), owing to the FTC-associated mutation M184IV. Of these cases, 3 had unrecognized acute infection at PrEP randomization, and 2 were HIV negative at enrollment. Conclusions. These results suggest that resistance selected by PrEP is rare but can occur both with PrEP initiation during acute seronegative HIV infection and in PrEP breakthrough infections and that FTC is associated with a greater frequency of resistance mutations than TDF.
    URI
    http://hdl.handle.net/11295/86856
    Publisher
    University of Nairobi
    Subject
    HIV pre-exposure prophylaxis antiretroviral resistance HIV prevention 10.1093/infdis/jiu678
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    • Faculty of Health Sciences (FHS) [10417]

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