Evolution of integrase resistance during failure of integrase inhibitor-based antiretroviral therapy.

2010 
Background: Although integrase inhibitors are highly effective in the management of drug-resistant HIV, some patients fail to achieve durable viral suppression. The long-term consequences of integrase inhibitor failure have not been well defined. Methods: We identified 29 individuals who exhibited evidence of incomplete viral suppression on a regimen containing an integrase inhibitor (23 raltegravir, 6 elvitegravir). Before initiating the integrase inhibitor-based regimen, the median CD4 + T-cell count and plasma HIV RNA levels were 62 cells/mm 3 and 4.65 log 10 copies/mL, respectively. Results: At the first failure time-point, the most common integrase resistance pattern for subjects taking raltegravir was wild-type, followed in order of frequency by Q148H/K/R+G140S, N155H, and Y143R/H/C. The most common resistance pattern for subjects taking elvitegravir was E92Q. Long-term failure was associated with continued viral evolution, emergence of high-level phenotypic resistance, and a decrease in replicative capacity. Conclusions: Although wild-type failure during early integrase inhibitor failure is common, most patients eventually develop high-level phenotypic drug resistance. This resistance evolution is gradual and associated with declines in replicative capacity.
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