Comparing HIV viral load assays and frequency of low level virological rebound in clinical practice

被引:7
|
作者
Briggs, R. [1 ]
Templeton, K. [2 ]
Fernando, I. [3 ]
机构
[1] Univ Edinburgh, Sch Med, Edinburgh, Midlothian, Scotland
[2] NHS Lothian, Royal Infirm Edinburgh, Microbiol & Virol Labs, Edinburgh, Midlothian, Scotland
[3] NHS Lothian, Chalmers Sexual Hlth Ctr, Edinburgh, Midlothian, Scotland
关键词
HIV; AIDS; antiretroviral therapy; treatment; viral load monitoring; blips; low-level virological rebound; ACTIVE ANTIRETROVIRAL THERAPY; ROCHE COBAS AMPLICOR; TEST VERSION 2.0; TIME PCR ASSAYS; TAQMAN ASSAY; INFLUENZA VACCINATION; INTERMITTENT VIREMIA; INFECTED PATIENTS; 50; COPIES/ML; RNA LEVELS;
D O I
10.1177/0956462414528313
中图分类号
R392 [医学免疫学]; Q939.91 [免疫学];
学科分类号
100102 ;
摘要
Research suggests that some low-level virological rebound results occurring for no obvious clinical cause, in patients stable on antiretroviral therapy (ART), may be a consequence of the viral load assay used. We compared the relative frequency of clinically unexplained low-level virological rebound results when using the Roche HIV Taqman version-1 (CTM v1), the Roche HIV Taqman version-2 (CTM v2) and the Abbott RealTime (Abbott RT) assays in clinical practice. In all, 247 patients from our centre who had their viral loads measured by the three different assays over a period of 3 consecutive years (each assay used for a period of 1 year each) were included in the study. Low-level virological rebound was defined as < 1000 copies/ml. Over similar time periods, there was significant discrepancy between the three assays when considering the proportion of clinically unexplained low-level virological rebound results in patients stable on ART: the CTM v2 assay produced the highest percentage (93%), CTM v1 much lower (65%) and Abbott RT even less (35%). There is further research required regarding what, if any, implications this has for patients who experience clinically unexplained low-level virological rebound on the more sensitive assays.
引用
收藏
页码:1029 / 1034
页数:6
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [31] HIV-1 viral load assays for resource-limited settings
    Fiscus, Susan A.
    Cheng, Ben
    Crowe, Suzanne M.
    Demeter, Lisa
    Jennings, Cheryl
    Miller, Veronica
    Respess, Richard
    Stevens, Wendy
    PLOS MEDICINE, 2006, 3 (10) : 1743 - 1750
  • [32] HIV-1 viral load assays for resource-limited settings
    Preiser, Wolfgang
    Drexler, Jan Felix
    Drosten, Christian
    PLOS MEDICINE, 2006, 3 (12) : 2460 - 2461
  • [33] Virological efficacy of PI monotherapy for HIV-1 in clinical practice
    El Bouzidi, Kate
    Collier, Dami
    Nastouli, Eleni
    Copas, Andrew J.
    Miller, Robert F.
    Gupta, Ravindra K.
    JOURNAL OF ANTIMICROBIAL CHEMOTHERAPY, 2016, 71 (11) : 3228 - 3234
  • [34] Very high pre-therapy viral load is a predictor of virological rebound in HIV-1-infected patients starting a modern first-line regimen
    Armenia, Daniele
    Di Carlo, Domenico
    Cozzi-Lepri, Alessandro
    Calcagno, Andrea
    Borghi, Vanni
    Gori, Caterina
    Bertoli, Ada
    Gennari, William
    Bellagamba, Rita
    Castagna, Antonella
    Latini, Alessandra
    Pinnetti, Carmela
    Cicalini, Stefania
    Saracino, Annalisa
    Lapadula, Giuseppe
    Rusconi, Stefano
    Castelli, Francesco
    Di Giambenedetto, Simona
    Andreoni, Massimo
    Di Perri, Giovanni
    Antinori, Andrea
    Mussini, Cristina
    Ceccherini-Silberstein, Francesca
    Monforte, Antonella D'Arminio
    Perno, Carlo F.
    Santoro, Maria M.
    ANTIVIRAL THERAPY, 2019, 24 (05) : 321 - 331
  • [35] Low level viraemia and the risk of virological failure in HIV infected patients
    Dragoş Florea
    Ionelia Bâțan
    Angelica Doana
    Simona Paraschiv
    Leontina Bănică
    Dan Oțelea
    BMC Infectious Diseases, 14 (Suppl 4)
  • [36] A flexible nonlinear mixed effects model for HIV viral load rebound after treatment interruption
    Wang, Rui
    Bing, Ante
    Wang, Cathy
    Hu, Yuchen
    Bosch, Ronald J.
    DeGruttola, Victor
    STATISTICS IN MEDICINE, 2020, 39 (15) : 2051 - 2066
  • [37] HIV Antibody Level as a Marker of HIV Persistence and Low-Level Viral Replication
    Keating, Sheila M.
    Pilcher, Christopher D.
    Jain, Vivek
    Lebedeva, Mila
    Hampton, Dylan
    Abdel-Mohsen, Mohamed
    Deng, Xutao
    Murphy, Gary
    Welte, Alex
    Facente, Shelley N.
    Hecht, Frederick
    Deeks, Steven G.
    Pillai, Satish K.
    Busch, Michael P.
    JOURNAL OF INFECTIOUS DISEASES, 2017, 216 (01): : 72 - 81
  • [38] Impact of low-level viremia on clinical and virological outcomes in treated HIV-1-infected patients
    Vandenhende, Marie-Anne
    Ingle, Suzanne
    May, Margaret
    Chene, Genevieve
    Zangerle, Robert
    Van Sighem, Ard
    Gill, M. John
    Schwarze-Zander, Carolynne
    Hernandez-Novoa, Beatriz
    Obel, Niels
    Kirk, Ole
    Abgrall, Sophie
    Guest, Jodie
    Samji, Hasina
    Monforte, Antonella D'Arminio
    Llibre, Josep M.
    Smith, Colette
    Cavassini, Matthias
    Burkholder, Greer A.
    Shepherd, Bryan
    Crane, Heidi M.
    Sterne, Jonathan
    Morlat, Philippe
    AIDS, 2015, 29 (03) : 373 - 383
  • [39] Analytical treatment interruption in chronic HIV-1 infection: time and magnitude of viral rebound in adults with 10 years of undetectable viral load and low HIV-DNA (APACHE study)
    Castagna, Antonella
    Muccini, Camilla
    Galli, Laura
    Bigoloni, Alba
    Poli, Andrea
    Spagnuolo, Vincenzo
    Nozza, Silvia
    Racca, Sara
    Galli, Andrea
    Cinque, Paola
    Carini, Elisabetta
    Lazzarin, Adriano
    JOURNAL OF ANTIMICROBIAL CHEMOTHERAPY, 2019, 74 (07) : 2039 - 2046
  • [40] Problems in the interpretation of HIV-1 viral load assays using commercial reagents
    O'Shea, S
    Chrystie, I
    Cranston, R
    Mullen, J
    Corbett, K
    Murphy, G
    Parry, JV
    De Ruiter, A
    Banatvala, J
    JOURNAL OF MEDICAL VIROLOGY, 2000, 61 (02) : 187 - 194