HIV-1 drug resistance testing is essential for heavily-treated patients switching from first- to second-line regimens in resource-limited settings: evidence from routine clinical practice in Cameroon.
Desire TakouJoseph FokamGeorges TetoMaria-Mercedes SantoroFrancesca Ceccherini-SilbersteinAubin Joseph NanfackSamuel Martin SossoBéatrice DambayaRomina SalpiniSerge Clotaire BillongCaterina GoriCharles Ntungwen FokunangGiulia CappelliVittorio ColizziCarlo-Federico PernoAlexis NdjoloPublished in: BMC infectious diseases (2019)
First-line ART-failure exhibits high-level NRTI-resistance, with potential lower-efficacy of AZT compared to TDF. Significantly, using our 80% efficacy-threshold, only patients without NRTI-substitution on first-line could effectively switch to SLC following the WHO-approach. Patients with multiple NRTI-substitutions (exposed to both thymidine-analogues and TDF) on first-line ART would require HIVDR-testing to select active NRTIs for SLC.