Bussmann Hermann, de la Hoz Gomez Florindo, Roels Thierry H, Wester C William, Bodika Stephane M, Moyo Sikhulile, Taffa Negussie, Anderson Marina G, Mine Madisa, Bile Ebi-Celestin, Yang Chunfu, Mphoyakgosi Kereng, Lehotzky Erica Ann, Mlotshwa Busisiwe, Mmelesi Mpho, Seipone Khumo, Makhema Moeketsi J, Marlink Richard G, Novitsky Vladimir, Essex M
Botswana-Harvard AIDS Institute (BHP) , Gaborone, Botswana.
AIDS Res Hum Retroviruses. 2011 Apr;27(4):365-72. doi: 10.1089/aid.2009.0299. Epub 2010 Oct 29.
The emergence and spread of transmitted drug resistance (TDR) poses a major threat to the success of the rapidly expanding antiretroviral treatment (ART) programs in resource-limited countries. The World Health Organization recommends the use of the HIV Drug Resistance Threshold Survey (HIVDR-TS) as an affordable means to monitor the presence of TDR in these settings. We report our experiences and results of the 2007 HIVDR-TS in Botswana, a country with one of the longest-existing national public ART programs in Africa. The HIVDR-TS and HIV-1 incidence testing were performed in the two largest national sites as part of the 2007 antenatal Botswana Sentinel Survey. The HIVDR-TS showed no significant drug resistance mutations (TDR less than 5%) in one site. TDR prevalence, however, could not be ascertained at the second site due to low sample size. The agreement between HIVDR-TS eligibility criteria and laboratory-based methodologies (i.e., BED-CEIA and LS-EIA) in identifying recently HIV-1 infected adults was poor. Five years following the establishment of Botswana's public ART program, the prevalence of TDR remains low. The HIVDR-TS methodology has limitations for low-density populations as in Botswana, where the majority of antenatal sites are too small to recruit sufficient numbers of patients. In addition, the eligibility criteria (age <25 years and parity (first pregnancy)) of the HIVDR-TS performed poorly in identifying recent HIV-1 infections in Botswana. An alternative sampling strategy should be considered for the surveillance of HIVDR in Botswana and similar geographic settings.
传播性耐药(TDR)的出现和传播对资源有限国家迅速扩大的抗逆转录病毒治疗(ART)项目的成功构成了重大威胁。世界卫生组织建议使用艾滋病毒耐药阈值调查(HIVDR-TS)作为监测这些环境中TDR存在情况的一种经济实惠的手段。我们报告了2007年在博茨瓦纳进行的HIVDR-TS的经验和结果,该国是非洲现有国家公共ART项目持续时间最长的国家之一。作为2007年博茨瓦纳产前哨点调查的一部分,在该国两个最大的地点进行了HIVDR-TS和HIV-1发病率检测。HIVDR-TS在一个地点未发现显著的耐药突变(TDR低于5%)。然而,由于样本量小,第二个地点的TDR流行率无法确定。在识别近期感染HIV-1的成年人方面,HIVDR-TS资格标准与基于实验室的方法(即BED-CEIA和LS-EIA)之间的一致性较差。博茨瓦纳公共ART项目建立五年后,TDR的流行率仍然较低。对于像博茨瓦纳这样的低密度人群,HIVDR-TS方法存在局限性,该国大多数产前检测点规模太小,无法招募到足够数量的患者。此外,HIVDR-TS的资格标准(年龄<25岁且为初产(首次怀孕))在识别博茨瓦纳近期HIV-1感染方面表现不佳。在博茨瓦纳及类似地理环境中,应考虑采用替代抽样策略来监测HIVDR。