Differences in drug resistance of HIV-1 genotypes in CSF and plasma and analysis of related factors

Virulence. 2023 Dec;14(1):2171632. doi: 10.1080/21505594.2023.2171632.

Abstract

The emergence of HIV drug resistance seriously affects the quality of life of patients. However, there has been no extensive study of CSF resistance. The aim of this study is to evaluate common HIV-1 resistance in CSF and compare it with resistance in matched plasma, and analyse the influencing factors of cerebrospinal fluid drug resistance. The matched CSF and plasma samples of 62 HIV-1 patients were tested at one study site in China (Chongqing; 2019-2022). HIV genotyping and drug resistance was evaluated using the Stanford v8.7 algorithm. The diagnosis and treatment data and basic information were collected from the clinical case system, and the influencing factors of drug resistance mutations in CSF was obtained by variance analysis. CSF and matched plasma HIV-1 subtypes were confirmed in 62 patients, and the most frequent recombinant form was CRF07-BC (64.5%). Thirteen patients (21.0%) were detected with drug-resistant mutations, and the sites were consistent in both CSF and matched plasma. The drug-resistant ratios of untreated patients and treated patients were 5/51 (9.8%) and 8/11 (72.7%), respectively. The type with the highest mutation frequency was NNRTI, and no mutation was found in INSTI. Multivariate analysis indicated that ARV treatment was associated with CSF resistance (P < 0.001). The subtypes and drug resistance mutation sites are consistent in CSF and matched plasma samples of HIV-1 patients, and there is a correlation between ARV treatment and possible drug resistance, especially in CSF reservoirs. These findings highlight the concern about CSF drug resistance in HIV patients.

Keywords: CSF; HIV-1; drug resistance; plasma; subtype.

Publication types

  • Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't

MeSH terms

  • Drug Resistance, Viral / genetics
  • Genotype
  • HIV Infections* / drug therapy
  • HIV-1* / genetics
  • Humans
  • Quality of Life

Grants and funding

This work was supported by the Joint medical scientific research project of Chongqing Health Commission and Science and Technology Bureau (2020FYYX112).