An observational study of high- and low-abundance anti-retroviral resistance mutations among treatment-naïve people living with HIV in New Zealand between 2012 and 2017.
Nicholas YoungMark HobbsFahimeh RahnamaJinyang ShiSimon BriggsPublished in: Internal medicine journal (2021)
HIV resistance genotyping detects drug resistance mutations (DRMs) in ≥20% of circulating virus within an infected individual (high-abundance DRMs). Deep sequencing also detects DRMs in smaller viral subpopulations (low-abundance DRMs), although these are of uncertain importance. In this retrospective analysis of 292 treatment-naïve patients, high-abundance DRMs were present in 30/292 (10%) patients, but only one (0.3%) had resistance to first-line anti-retrovirals. Low-abundance DRMs were present in 36/247 (15%) patients, but none who received anti-retrovirals for which these were present had virologic failure. These findings demonstrate that starting first-line therapy in treatment-naïve patients need not be delayed while awaiting resistance testing.