Pre-treatment integrase inhibitor resistance is uncommon in antiretroviral therapy-naive individuals with HIV-1 subtype A1 and D infections in Uganda.

  • Suzanne M. McCluskey ,
  • Kimia Kamelian ,
  • Nicholas Musinguzi ,
  • Simone Kigozi ,
  • Yap Boum ,
  • Mwebesa B. Bwana ,
  • Conrad Muzoora ,
  • Zabrina L. Brumme ,
  • Mary Carrington ,
  • ,
  • Brian Foley ,
  • Peter W. Hunt ,
  • Jeffrey N. Martin ,
  • David R. Bangsberg ,
  • P. Richard Harrigan ,
  • Mark J. Siedner ,
  • Jessica E. Haberer ,
  • Guinevere Q. Lee

AIDS | , Vol 35(7): pp. 1083-1089

Publication | Publication | Publication

OBJECTIVE Dolutegravir (DTG) is now a preferred component of first-line antiretroviral therapy (ART). However, prevalence data on natural resistance to integrase inhibitors [integrase strand transfer inhibitors (INSTIs)] in circulating non-subtype B HIV-1 in sub-Saharan Africa is scarce. Our objective is to report prevalence of pre-treatment integrase polymorphisms associated with resistance to INSTIs in an ART-naive cohort with diverse HIV-1 subtypes. DESIGN We retrospectively examined HIV-1 integrase sequences from Uganda.

METHODS Plasma samples were derived from the Uganda AIDS Rural Treatment Outcomes (UARTO) cohort, reflecting enrollment from 2002 to 2010, prior to initiation of ART. HIV-1 integrase was amplified using nested-PCR and Sanger-sequenced (HXB2 4230-5093). Stanford HIVdb v8.8 was used to infer clinically significant INSTI-associated mutations. Human leukocyte antigen (HLA) typing was performed for all study participants.

RESULTS Plasma samples from 511 ART-naive individuals (subtype: 48% A1, 39% D) yielded HIV-1 integrase genotyping results. Six out of 511 participants (1.2%) had any major INSTI-associated mutations. Of these, two had E138T (subtype A1), three had E138E/K (subtype D), and one had T66T/I (subtype D). No participants had mutations traditionally associated with high levels of INSTI resistance. HLA genotypes A∗02:01/05/14, B∗44:15, and C∗04:07 predicted the presence of L74I, a mutation recently observed in association with long-acting INSTI cabotegravir virologic failure.

CONCLUSION We detected no HIV-1 polymorphisms associated with high levels of DTG resistance in Uganda in the pre-DTG era. Our results support widespread implementation of DTG but careful monitoring of patients on INSTI with virologic failure is warranted to determine if unique mutations predict failure for non-B subtypes of HIV-1.