Virologic Failure in First Line HIV Therapy with a CCR5 Entry Inhibitor (Aplaviroc/Combivir, CCR102881): NRTI Resistance Regardless of Envelope Tropism. Antimicrobial agents and chemotherapy [Antimicrob Agents Chemother] Journal article | | Title | Virologic Failure in First Line HIV Therapy with a CCR5 Entry Inhibitor (Aplaviroc/Combivir, CCR102881): NRTI Resistance Regardless of Envelope Tropism. | | Author(s) | Demarest JF, Amrine-Madsen H, Irlbeck DM, Kitrinos KM, on behalf of the CCR102881 Clinical Study Team | | Institution | GlaxoSmithKline, Research Triangle Park, North Carolina 27709, USA. | | Source | Antimicrob Agents Chemother 2008 Dec 15. | | Abstract | Background: CCR102881(ASCENT) evaluated the antiviral activity of the novel CCR5 entry inhibitor aplaviroc in combination with combivir in drug-naïve HIV-1 infected subjects with only CCR5-tropic virus detected in plasma. Although the trial was stopped prematurely due to idiosyncratic hepatotoxicity, eight subjects met protocol-defined virologic failure criteria. Methods: Clonal analyses of viral envelope tropism, aplaviroc susceptibility, and env sequencing were performed on plasma from baseline and virologic failure. Molecular evolutionary analyses were also performed. Results: The majority of virologic failures (6/8) acquired the lamivudine resistance-associated mutation M184V, and none had evidence of reduced susceptibility to aplaviroc at virologic failure, even at the clonal level. Six virologic failures maintained CCR5-tropism while two exhibited a change in population tropism readout to dual/mixed-tropic with R5X4-tropic clones detected prior to therapy. Two molecular evolutionary patterns were observed; 5 subjects had no evidence for population turnover while 3 subjects had multiple lines of evidence for env population turnover. Conclusions: Acquisition of the M184V mutation is the primary characteristic of virologic failure in first line therapy with aplaviroc/combivir, regardless of envelope tropism. | | Language | ENG | | Pub Type(s) | JOURNAL ARTICLE
| | PubMed ID | 19075055 |
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