Residual phenotypic susceptibility to doravirine in multidrug resistant HIV-1 from subjects enrolled in the PRESTIGIO Registry
- Creators
- Saladini, Francesco
- Giammarino, Federica
- Maggiolo, Franco
- Ferrara, Micol
- Cenderello, Giovanni
- Celesia, Benedetto M
- Martellotta, Ferdinando
- Spagnuolo, Vincenzo
- Corbelli, Giulio M
- Gianotti, Nicola
- Santoro, Maria M
- Rusconi, Stefano
- Zazzi, Maurizio
- Castagna, Antonella
- prestigio registry
- Matteo Bassetti
- Antonio Di Biagio
- Others:
- Saladini, Francesco
- Giammarino, Federica
- Maggiolo, Franco
- Ferrara, Micol
- Cenderello, Giovanni
- Celesia, Benedetto M
- Martellotta, Ferdinando
- Spagnuolo, Vincenzo
- Corbelli, Giulio M
- Gianotti, Nicola
- Santoro, Maria M
- Rusconi, Stefano
- Zazzi, Maurizio
- Castagna, Antonella
- Prestigio, Registry
- Bassetti, Matteo
- DI BIAGIO, Antonio
Description
Background: Doravirine shows a rather distinct resistance profile within the NNRTI class. This study aimed to evaluate the phenotypic susceptibility to doravirine, rilpivirine and etravirine in a panel of multidrug-resistant (MDR) HIV-1 isolates collected from people living with HIV (PLWH) enrolled in the PRESTIGIO Registry. Methods: Recombinant viruses expressing PLWH derived protease-reverse transcriptase coding region were generated from plasma samples at virological failure with documented resistance to PIs, NRTIs, NNRTIs and INSTIs. In vitro susceptibility was assessed through a phenotypic assay measuring fold-change values with respect to the reference NL4-3 virus. Genotypic susceptibility was computed by the Stanford HIVdb algorithm 8.9-1. Results: Plasma samples were collected from 22 PLWH, twenty (91%) were male, median age 55 years (IQR 50-58), time since HIV-1 diagnosis 27 years (23-31), time on ART 23 years (22-26). Median doravirine, etravirine and rilpivirine fold-change values were 9.8 (2.9-40.4), 42.9 (3.1-100.0) and 100.0 (17.9-100.0), respectively. According to the fold-change cut-offs, full susceptibility was observed in 5 (23%), 4 (18%) and 1 (5%) cases with doravirine, etravirine and rilpivirine, respectively. Irrespective of the presence of specific doravirine mutations, higher numbers of NNRTI mutations correlated with higher fold-change values for doravirine. By comparing the distribution of fold-change values with the Stanford HIVdb predicted susceptibility, a significant correlation was detected for doravirine and rilpivirine but not etravirine. Conclusion: Despite extensive cross-resistance among NNRTIs, doravirine can be a valid option in a proportion of PLWH with MDR HIV-1. Doravirine activity appeared to be inferred with fair accuracy by HIVdb algorithm.
Additional details
- URL
- https://hdl.handle.net/11567/1126635
- URN
- urn:oai:iris.unige.it:11567/1126635
- Origin repository
- UNIGE