Brazilian network for HIV Drug Resistance Surveillance (HIV‐BresNet): a survey of treatment‐naive individuals

Monica Barcelos Arruda, Lídia Teodoro Boullosa,Cynthia Chester Cardoso, Carolina Marinho da Costa,Carlos Roberto Brites Alves, Shirlene Telmos Silva de Lima, Helena T. Kaminski,Agdemir Waléria Aleixo, A Esposito,Ana Maria Salustiano Cavalcanti,Maristela Riedel,José Carlos Couto-Fernandez, Simone Bacellar Leal Ferreira, Ivi Cristina Menezes de Oliveira, Loreci E. Portal, Hilda H. C. Wolf, Sandra Bianchini Fernandes,Maria Inês de Moura Campos Pardini, Manoel V. C. Feiteiro,Fernanda Modesto Tolentino,Ricardo Sobhie Diaz,Giselle Ibette Silva López Lopes,Roberta Barbosa Lopes Francisco,Nazle Mendonça Collaço Véras,Ana Flávia Pires,Miriam Franchini,Fábio Mesquita,Amílcar Tanuri, HIV-BResNet

Journal of the International AIDS Society(2018)

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Abstract
Abstract Introduction In Brazil, more than 487,450 individuals are currently undergoing antiretroviral treatment. In order to monitor the transmission of drug‐resistant strains and HIV subtype distribution in the country, this work aimed to estimate its prevalence and to characterize the nationwide pretreatment drug resistance in individuals recently diagnosed with HIV between 2013 and 2015. Methods The HIV threshold survey methodology ( HIV ‐ THS , WHO ) targeting antiretroviral‐naive individuals with recent HIV diagnosis was utilized, and subjects were selected from 51 highly populated cities in all five Brazilian macroregions. The HIV pol genotypic test was performed by genomic sequencing. Results We analysed samples from 1568 antiretroviral‐naive individuals recently diagnosed with HIV , and the overall transmitted drug resistance ( TDR ) prevalence was 9.5% (150 sequences). The regional prevalence of resistance according to Brazilian geographical regions was 9.4% in the northeast, 11.2% in the southeast, 6.8% in the central region, 10.2% in the north and 8.8% in the south. The inhibitor‐specific TDR prevalence was 3.6% for nucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitors ( NRTI s), 5.8% for non‐nucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitors ( NNRTI s) and 1.6% for protease inhibitors ( PI s); 1.0% of individuals presented resistance to more than one class of inhibitors. Overall, subtype B was more prevalent in every region except for the southern, where subtype C prevails. Conclusions To the best of our knowledge, this is the first TDR study conducted in Brazil with nationwide representative sampling. The TDR prevalence revealed a moderate rate in the five Brazilian geographical regions, although some cities presented higher TDR prevalence rates, reaching 14% in São Paulo, for example. These results further illustrate the importance of surveillance studies for designing future strategies in primary antiretroviral therapy, aiming to mitigate TDR , as well as for predicting future trends in other regions of the globe where mass antiretroviral ( ARV ) treatment was implemented.
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Key words
drug resistance surveillance,brazilian network,<scp>hiv</scp>,drug resistance
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