Surveillance of transmitted drug resistance to integrase inhibitors in Spain: Implications for clinical practice
Alvarez, M.; Casas, P.; De Salazar, A.; Chueca, N.; Guerrero-Beltran, C.; Rodríguez, C.; Imaz, A.; Espinosa, N.; García-Bujalance, S.; Pérez-Elías, M. J.; García-Alvarez, M.; Iribarren, J. A.; Santos, J.; Dalmau, D.; Aguilera Guirao, Antonio; Vinuesa, D.; Gutiérrez, F.; Piérola, B.; Molina, J. M.; Peraire, J.; Portilla, I.; Gómez-Sirvent, J. L.; Olalla, J.; Galera, C.; Blanco, J. R.; Riera, M.; García-Fraile, L.; Navarro, G.; Curran, A.; Poveda López, Eva; García, F.
Identificadores
Identificadores
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11940/15756
PMID: 30838386
DOI: 10.1093/jac/dkz067
ISSN: 0305-7453
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Autor corporativo
CoRISData de publicación
2019Título da revista
JOURNAL OF ANTIMICROBIAL CHEMOTHERAPY
Tipo de contido
Artigo
DeCS
VIH-1 | anciano | resistencia a medicamentos | prevalencia | vigilancia en salud pública | mediana edad | humanos | inhibidores de la integrasa del VIH | adulto | infecciones por VIHMeSH
Adult | Middle Aged | Humans | HIV Integrase Inhibitors | Public Health Surveillance | Drug Resistance | HIV-1 | Aged | Prevalence | HIV InfectionsResumo
BACKGROUND: Integrase strand-transfer inhibitors (INSTIs) constitute at present one of the pillars of first-line ART. OBJECTIVES: To study the prevalence of and the trend in transmitted drug resistance (TDR) to INSTIs in ART-naive patients in Spain. METHODS: During the period 2012-17, 1109 patients from CoRIS were analysed. The Stanford algorithm v8.7 was used to evaluate TDR and transmission of clinically relevant resistance. To describe individual mutations/polymorphisms, the most recent IAS list (for INSTIs) and the 2009 WHO list update (for the backbone NRTIs used in combination with INSTIs in first-line treatment) were used. RESULTS: Clinically relevant resistance to the INSTI class was 0.2%: T66I, 0.1%, resistance to elvitegravir and intermediate resistance to raltegravir; and G163K, 0.1%, intermediate resistance to raltegravir and elvitegravir. No clinical resistance to dolutegravir or bictegravir was observed. The prevalence of INSTI TDR following the IAS-USA INSTI mutation list was 2.6%, with no trend towards changes in the prevalence throughout the study period. The overall prevalence of NRTI WHO mutations was 4.3%, whereas clinically relevant resistance to tenofovir, abacavir and emtricitabine/lamivudine was 1.7%, 1.9% and 0.7%, respectively. CONCLUSIONS: Given the low prevalence of clinically relevant resistance to INSTIs and first-line NRTIs in Spain, it is very unlikely that a newly diagnosed patient will present with clinical resistance to a first-line INSTI-based regimen. These patients may not benefit from INSTI and NRTI baseline resistance testing.