Antiretroviral adherence, drug resistance, viral fitness and HIV disease progression: a tangled web is woven
Open Access
- 1 April 2005
- journal article
- review article
- Published by Oxford University Press (OUP) in Journal of Antimicrobial Chemotherapy
- Vol. 55 (4), 413-416
- https://doi.org/10.1093/jac/dki042
Abstract
The clinical goals of HIV treatment are optimally accomplished through consistent high-level adherence to highly active antiretroviral therapy (HAART) and durable suppression of the viral load. However, as a result of the need for lifelong therapy and HIV's prodigious replication rate and error-prone reverse transcriptase, varying amounts of antiretroviral drug resistance are common in treated individuals. Medication adherence is linked to the development of drug resistance, although not by a simple linear relationship. Recent studies have suggested that extensive drug resistance is not a major determinant of HIV disease progression and death. Rather, failure to access care and discontinuation of or non-adherence with therapy are arguably the most important factors associated with HIV disease progression in the HAART era. Other data indicate that continued therapy in the setting of extensive drug resistance and the inability to achieve viral suppression can provide continued clinical benefit. Such benefit may be mediated, at least partially, by reductions in viral fitness associated with drug resistance mutations.Keywords
This publication has 27 references indexed in Scilit:
- Intrapartum Exposure to Nevirapine and Subsequent Maternal Responses to Nevirapine-Based Antiretroviral TherapyNew England Journal of Medicine, 2004
- Antiretroviral Resistance among HIV‐Infected Persons Who Have Died in British Columbia, in the Era of Modern Antiretroviral TherapyThe Journal of Infectious Diseases, 2004
- GW433908/ritonavir once daily in antiretroviral therapy-naive HIV-infected patientsAIDS, 2004
- Incidence of Resistance in a Double‐Blind Study Comparing Lopinavir/Ritonavir Plus Stavudine and Lamivudine to Nelfinavir plus Stavudine and LamivudineThe Journal of Infectious Diseases, 2004
- High levels of adherence do not prevent accumulation of HIV drug resistance mutationsAIDS, 2003
- Continued CD4 cell count increases in HIV-infected adults experiencing 4 years of viral suppression on antiretroviral therapyAIDS, 2003
- Antiretroviral Drug Resistance Testing in Adults Infected with Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1: 2003 Recommendations of an International AIDS Society–USA PanelClinical Infectious Diseases, 2003
- Virologic Rebound on HAART in the Context of Low Treatment Adherence Is Associated With a Low Prevalence of Antiretroviral Drug ResistanceJAIDS Journal of Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndromes, 2002
- Virologic and Immunologic Consequences of Discontinuing Combination Antiretroviral-Drug Therapy in HIV-Infected Patients with Detectable ViremiaNew England Journal of Medicine, 2001
- Sustained CD4+T Cell Response after Virologic Failure of Protease Inhibitor–Based Regimens in Patients with Human Immunodeficiency Virus InfectionThe Journal of Infectious Diseases, 2000