Home Go to http://www.treatHIV.com
Bibliography HomeBoardAboutContact
 

Perspectives and OpinionsMutation and Drug DataAsk the ExpertsTest InfoFrom the PodiumDaily Resistance NewsBest of SiteArchive
Nevirapine resistance mutations of human immunodeficiency virus type 1 selected during therapy.
Originally Published on January 1, 1994

Richman DD; et al; Pauletti D; Barringer K.Cheeseman S; Sullivan J; Spector SA; Ignacio C; Looney D, Corbeil J; Havlir D.

J Virol. 1994 Mar;68(3):1660-6 (94149857)

ABSTRACT:
Drug susceptibility and mutations in the reverse transcriptase (RT) gene were analyzed with 167 virus isolates from 38 patients treated with nevirapine, a potent nonnucleoside inhibitor of human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) RT.

Resistant isolates emerged quickly and uniformly in all patients administered nevirapine either as monotherapy or in combination with zidovudine (AZT). Resistance developed as early as 1 week,indicating rapid turnover of the virus population. The development of resistance was associated with the loss of antiviral drug activity as measured by CD4 lymphocyte counts and levels of HIV p24 antigen and RNA in serum. In addition to mutations at amino acid residues 103, 106, and 181 that had beenidentified by selection in cell culture, mutations at residues 108, 188, and 190 were also found in the patient isolates.

Sequences from patient clones documented cocirculating mixtures of populations of different mutants. The most common mutation with monotherapy, tyrosine to cysteine at residue 181, was prevented from emerging by coadministration of AZT, whichresulted in the selection of alternative mutations.

The observations documented that, under selective drug pressure, the circulating virus population can change rapidly, and manyalternative mutants can emerge, often in complex mixtures. The addition of a second RT inhibitor, AZT, significantly altered thepattern of mutations in the circulating population of HIV.

back to the top of this article
  Vertibrae
Copyright © 1997–2003, Vertibrae, Inc. and HIVresistanceWeb. All rights reserved.  |  Privacy Policy
RegisterLogin