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Antiretroviral (ARV) Drug Resistance

Full Title: Antiretroviral (ARV) Drug Resistance in the Developing World

September 2007

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Structured Abstract

Objectives: To describe the overall prevalence of ARV resistance in the developing world, focusing on:

  1. Treatment naïve populations
  2. The resistance consequences of prevention of mother to child transmission (pMTCT) drug regimens.
  3. The relationship of medication adherence to resistance.

Data Sources: We searched PubMed®, EMBASE, the Cochrane Controlled Clinical Trials Register Database, and the Cochrane Database of Reviews of Effectiveness (DARE). Additional sources of evidence included the Stanford University HIV Drug Resistance Database; reports of WATCH: Worldwide Analysis of Resistance Transmission over Time of Chronically and Acute Infected HIV-1 infected persons; a recent unpublished pMTCT overview; and various conference proceedings. Studies that did not report original research, that reported data already reported in another article, and case studies of fewer than 20 individuals were excluded. Of 1,122 titles identified, 117 journal articles and presentations were included.

Review Methods: We abstracted data on geographic region, number of participants, subject demographics, HIV viral clade, medications taken (if any), years of data collection, how people were selected for resistance testing, and how and when resistance was assessed. Because of study heterogeneity, pooling was not possible; thus, the data are summarized qualitatively. Differences by region, population group, and HIV viral clade are described.

Results: The patterns of ARV resistance among treatment naïve populations worldwide appear to reflect geographic trends in use of ARV medications. A worldwide surveillance program (WATCH) found the rate of resistance (to any drug) among treatment naïve individuals was 5.5 percent in Africa, 7.4% in East Asia, 5.7 percent in Southeast Asia, and 6.4 percent in Latin America, lower than in North America (11.4 percent) and Europe (10.6 percent).

Resistance data on HIV clades other than A, B, C, and D were too scarce to permit reliable conclusions. We also identified very few studies designed to assess the effect of health services delivery factors or medication adherence on the development of resistance in patients in developing countries.

Evidence provided by longitudinal analyses suggests that, among women taking intrapartum single dose nevirapine (SD-NVP) to prevent mother-to-child transmission of HIV, both the overall prevalence of NNRTI resistance as well as the frequency of mutant virus in the overall viral population decreases with time since SD-NVP prophylaxis was received.

Conclusions: In future resistance studies, rare HIV clades should be over-sampled in order to provide statistically meaningful data. Resistance surveillance programs should be maintained throughout the developing world, and data should be reported and analyzed in a consistent and timely manner. Where resources permit, studies of adherence in developing regions should conduct resistance testing.


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Antiretroviral Drug Resistance

Evidence-based Practice Center: Southern California
Topic Nominators: Fogarty International Center, National Institutes of Health (NIH)

Current as of September 2007


Internet Citation:

Antiretroviral Drug Resistance, Structured Abstract. September 2007 Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality, Rockville, MD. http://www.ahrq.gov/clinic/tp/antirettp.htm


 

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