High concordance in plasma and CSF HIV-1 drug resistance mutations despite high cases of CSF viral escape in individuals with HIV-associated cryptococcal meningitis in Botswana.

Nametso Kelentse ORCID logo; Sikhulile Moyo; Wonderful T Choga; Kwana Lechiile; Tshepo B Leeme; David S Lawrence ORCID logo; Ishmael Kasvosve; Rosemary Musonda; Mosepele Mosepele; Thomas S Harrison; +2 more... Joseph N Jarvis ORCID logo; Simani Gaseitsiwe; (2022) High concordance in plasma and CSF HIV-1 drug resistance mutations despite high cases of CSF viral escape in individuals with HIV-associated cryptococcal meningitis in Botswana. Journal of antimicrobial chemotherapy, 78 (1). pp. 180-184. ISSN 0305-7453 DOI: 10.1093/jac/dkac372
Copy

OBJECTIVES: We compared the patterns of HIV-1 drug resistance mutations between the CSF and plasma of individuals with HIV-associated cryptococcal meningitis. METHODS: This is a cross-sectional study of archived CSF and plasma samples collected from ART-exposed participants recruited in the Phase 3 AmBisome Therapy Induction Optimisation randomized controlled trial (ISRCTN72509687) conducted in Botswana between 2018 and 2021. HIV-1 RT and protease genes were genotyped using next-generation sequencing and HIV-1 drug resistance mutations were compared between the CSF and plasma compartments stratified by thresholds of ≥20% and <20%. RESULTS: Overall, 66.7% (16/24) of participants had at least one HIV-1 drug resistance mutation in the CSF and/or plasma. A total of 15/22 (68.2%) participants had HIV-1 drug resistance mutations at ≥20% threshold in the plasma and of those, 11 (73.3%) had been on ART longer than 6 months. HIV-1 drug resistance mutations were highly concordant between the CSF and plasma at ≥20% threshold despite a substantial number of individuals experiencing CSF viral escape and with only 54.5% with CSF WBC count ≥20 cells/mm3. Minority HIV-1 drug resistance mutations were detected in 20.8% (5/24) of participants. There were no mutations in the CSF that were not detected in the plasma. CONCLUSIONS: There was high concordance in HIV-1 drug resistance mutations in the CSF and plasma, suggesting intercompartmental mixing and possibly a lack of compartmentalization. Some individuals harboured minority HIV-1 drug resistance mutations, demonstrating the need to employ more sensitive genotyping methods such as next-generation sequencing for the detection of low-abundance mutations.

visibility_off picture_as_pdf

picture_as_pdf
Kelentse et al - J Antimicrob Chemother 2022.pdf
subject
Published Version
lock
Restricted to Repository staff only
copyright
Available under Copyright the publishers

Request Copy

Atom BibTeX OpenURL ContextObject in Span Multiline CSV OpenURL ContextObject Dublin Core Dublin Core MPEG-21 DIDL EndNote HTML Citation JSON MARC (ASCII) MARC (ISO 2709) METS MODS RDF+N3 RDF+N-Triples RDF+XML RIOXX2 XML Reference Manager Refer Simple Metadata ASCII Citation EP3 XML
Export

Downloads