ViiV Healthcare, Research Triangle Park, North Carolina, USA.
University of California San Francisco, San Francisco, California, USA.
Antimicrob Agents Chemother. 2022 Jan 18;66(1):e0164521. doi: 10.1128/AAC.01645-21. Epub 2021 Oct 25.
P1093 is a multicenter, open-label, phase I/II study of pharmacokinetics, safety, and tolerability of dolutegravir plus an optimized background regimen in pediatric participants aged 4 weeks to <18 years with HIV-1. Most participants were highly treatment experienced. We report the mechanisms of emergent integrase strand transfer inhibitor (INSTI) resistance among adolescents and children receiving dolutegravir. Plasma was collected at screening and near protocol-defined virologic failure (PDVF) for population-level and, for some samples, clonal-level integrase genotyping, phenotyping, and replication capacity. HIV-1 RNA was assessed in all available plasma samples. Phylogenetic analysis of clonal integrase sequences and homology modeling of HIV-1 intasome complexes containing resistance-associated substitutions were performed. Treatment-emergent INSTI resistance was detected in 8 participants who met PDVF criteria. The rare INSTI resistance-associated substitution G118R or R263K developed in 6 participants. The on-study secondary integrase substitution E157Q or L74I was observed in 2 participants. G118R reduced dolutegravir susceptibility and integrase replication capacity more than R263K and demonstrated greater reduction in susceptibility and integrase replication capacity when present with specific secondary integrase substitutions, including L74M, T66I, and E138E/K. Continuing evolution after R263K acquisition led to reduced dolutegravir susceptibility and integrase replication capacity. Structural examination revealed potential mechanisms for G118R- and R263K-mediated INSTI resistance. G118R and R263K INSTI resistance substitutions, which are distinct to second-generation INSTIs, were detected in adolescents and children with prior virologic failure who received dolutegravir. This study provides additional molecular and structural characterization of integrase to aid in the understanding of INSTI resistance mechanisms in antiretroviral-experienced populations. (This study has been registered at ClinicalTrials.gov under identifier NCT01302847.).
P1093 是一项多中心、开放性、I/II 期研究,旨在评估多拉韦林联合优化背景治疗方案在 4 周龄至<18 岁 HIV-1 感染儿童和青少年中的药代动力学、安全性和耐受性。大多数参与者为高度治疗经验者。我们报告了接受多拉韦林治疗的青少年和儿童中新兴整合酶链转移抑制剂(INSTI)耐药的机制。在筛选时和接近方案定义的病毒学失败(PDVF)时采集血浆,进行群体水平和部分样本的整合酶基因分型、表型和复制能力的克隆水平分析。所有可用血浆样本均检测 HIV-1 RNA。对克隆整合酶序列进行系统发育分析,并对含有耐药相关突变的 HIV-1 intasome 复合物进行同源建模。8 名符合 PDVF 标准的患者检测到治疗后出现的 INSTI 耐药。6 名患者出现了罕见的 INSTI 耐药相关突变 G118R 或 R263K。2 名患者出现了研究期间的次要整合酶突变 E157Q 或 L74I。G118R 比 R263K 降低了多拉韦林的敏感性和整合酶复制能力,并且当与特定的次要整合酶突变(包括 L74M、T66I 和 E138E/K)共存时,降低了对多拉韦林的敏感性和整合酶复制能力。R263K 获得后继续进化导致对多拉韦林的敏感性和整合酶复制能力降低。结构检查揭示了 G118R 和 R263K 介导的 INSTI 耐药的潜在机制。在接受多拉韦林治疗且先前发生病毒学失败的青少年和儿童中检测到与第二代 INSTIs 不同的 G118R 和 R263K INSTI 耐药突变。该研究提供了整合酶的额外分子和结构特征,有助于理解抗逆转录病毒经验人群中 INSTI 耐药机制。(本研究已在 ClinicalTrials.gov 注册,登记号为 NCT01302847.)。