HIV-DRLink: A tool for detecting linked HIV-1 drug resistance mutations in next generation sequencing data

2019 
The prevalence of HIV-1 drug resistance is increasing worldwide and monitoring its emergence is important for the successful management of populations receiving combination antiretroviral therapy (cART). Using Ultrasensitive Single-Genome Sequencing (uSGS), a next-generation method that avoids PCR bias and PCR recombination, a recent report showed that pre-existing dual-class drug resistance mutations linked on the same viral genomes were predictive of treatment failure while unlinked mutations were not. Because of the large numbers of sequences generated by uSGS and other next-generation sequencing methods, it is difficult to assess each sequence individually for linked resistance mutations. Several software/programs exist to report the frequencies of individual mutations in large datasets but they provide no information on their linkage. Here, we report the HIV-DRLink program, a research tool that provides mutation frequencies in the total dataset as well as their linkage to other mutations conferring resistance to the same or different drug classes. The HIV-DRLink program should only be used on datasets generated by methods that eliminate artifacts due to PCR recombination, for example, standard Single-Genome Sequencing (SGS) or Ultrasensitive Single-Genome Sequencing (uSGS). HIV-DRLink is exclusively a research tool and is not intended to inform clinical decisions.
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