Failure of stavudine-lamivudine combination therapy in antiretroviral-naive patients with AZT-like HIV-1 resistance mutations.
J Med Virol 2001;
65:631-6. [PMID:
11745924 DOI:
10.1002/jmv.2083]
[Citation(s) in RCA: 9] [Impact Index Per Article: 0.4] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [MESH Headings] [Track Full Text] [Journal Information] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Indexed: 11/09/2022]
Abstract
To analyze the clinical relevance of AZT resistance mutations in AZT-naive patients, 56 HIV-1 seropositive patients treated for 18 months with stavudine/lamivudine (27 patients) or AZT/lamivudine (29 patients) were studied. AZT-like resistance mutations were found in 13 out of 29 (44%) patients treated with AZT/lamivudine and in 11 out of 27 (40%) patients treated with stavudine/lamivudine. No stavudine or multi-drug resistance mutations were detected. After 26 months of treatment more than 60% of patients showed a virological failure. Among 10 patients failing treatment with stavudine/lamivudine, 9 had AZT-like resistance mutations. The phenotypic test, performed on HIV-1 strains isolated from six of these nine patients, showed a resistance to AZT in five isolates and to stavudine in two isolates. The genotypic pattern of the latter two isolates showed the combined mutations M184V plus R211K and L214F. AZT-like resistance mutations in AZT-naive patients seem to correlate with a virological failure during long-term stavudine therapy.
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