Resistance to AZT can last for over 18 months, even after switch to effective therapy

This article is more than 22 years old.

Strains of HIV which are resistant to AZT can persist at least a year and a half after treatment with the drug is discontinued, according to French study published in the September 2002 edition of the Journal of Medical Virology.

Investigators at the Hopital Europeen Georges Pompidou in Paris conducted a prospective study of 66 people who had developed resistance to AZT when used in HAART combinations, at condons 41 and 215 of the reverse transcriptase gene.

Even when the study participants were switched to either a dual or triple HAART regimen and experienced a fall in viral load to below the limits of detection, resistance to AZT at codon 215 persisted for up to 20 months, with 93.5% of the study sample having the mutation at baseline and 96.3% at 12 to 20 months.

Glossary

prospective study

A type of longitudinal study in which people join the study and information is then collected on them for several weeks, months or years. 

strain

A variant characterised by a specific genotype.

 

codon

A position within a gene.

gene

A unit of heredity, that determines a specific feature of the shape of a living organism. This genetic element is a sequence of DNA (or RNA, for viruses), located in a very specific place (locus) of a chromosome.

reverse transcriptase

A retroviral enzyme which converts genetic material from RNA into DNA, an essential step in the lifecycle of HIV. Several classes of anti-HIV drugs interfere with this stage of HIV’s life cycle: nucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitors and nucleotide reverse transcriptase inhibitors (NRTIs) and non-nucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitors (NNRTIs). 

The study authors speculate that the persistence of AZT resistance may have two complementary causes: the continued selection of thymidine analogue resistance mutations by regimens which normally included d4T, and the effect of the new regimens in suppressing viral load may have inhibited the replacement of less fit HIV mutations by fitter variants.

In conclusion the authors note that “at least fifteen months following discontinuation” of AZT, “effective antiretroviral therapy is insufficient to allow for ZDV (AZT) resistant strains to disappear, and thus allow for the safe re-introduction of the drug.”

References

Belec L et al. Sustained high proportion of zidovudine-resistant HIV variants despite prolonged substitution of zidovudine by other nucleoside reverse transcritpase inhibitors. Journal of Medical Virology, 68: 1, 1-6, 2002.