Morris L, Pillay C, Gray G, McIntyre J
AIDS Virus Research Unit, National Institute for Communicable Diseases, Private Bag X4, Sandringham 2131, Johannesburg, South Africa.
SADJ. 2001 Dec;56(12):614-6.
The use of antiretroviral drug therapies in HIV-1 infected pregnant women and their infants has resulted in significant reductions in the rates of mother-to-child transmission of HIV-1. A number of drugs that target the reverse transcriptase enzyme have been tested either alone or in combination in short-course regimens tailored for use in developing countries. The drug of choice is nevirapine, which is cheap, easy to administer and highly effective even following a single dose to mother and child. However, this regimen is associated with the selection of mutations associated with drug resistance. While these mutations do not compromise the ability of nevirapine to prevent mother-to-child transmission there is some concern that they may compromise future treatment options. Here we review the current data on HIV-1 drug resistance mutations and what they might mean in terms of efficacy of antiretroviral therapies to prevent mother-to-child transmission.
在感染HIV-1的孕妇及其婴儿中使用抗逆转录病毒药物疗法,已使HIV-1母婴传播率大幅降低。许多针对逆转录酶的药物已在为发展中国家量身定制的短疗程方案中单独或联合进行了测试。首选药物是奈韦拉平,它价格便宜、易于给药,即使母婴单剂量使用也非常有效。然而,这种疗法与耐药相关突变的产生有关。虽然这些突变不会损害奈韦拉平预防母婴传播的能力,但有人担心它们可能会影响未来的治疗选择。在此,我们综述了目前关于HIV-1耐药突变的数据,以及它们在抗逆转录病毒疗法预防母婴传播疗效方面可能意味着什么。