This study examines the persistence and fitness of multidrug-resistant (MDR) viruses acquired during primary human immunodeficiency virus infection (PHI). In four individuals, MDR infections persisted over the entire study period, ranging from 36 weeks to 5 years, in the absence of antiretroviral therapy. In stark contrast, identified source partners in two cases showed expected outgrowth of wild-type (WT) virus within 12 weeks of treatment interruption. In the first PHI case, triple-class MDR resulted in low plasma viremia (1.6 to 3 log copies/ml) over time compared with mean values obtained for an untreated PHI group harboring WT infections (4.1 to 4.3 log copies/ml). Increasing viremia in PHI patient 1 at week 52 was associated with the de novo emergence of a protease inhibitor-resistant variant through a recombination event involving the original MDR virus. MDR infections in two other untreated PHI patients yielded viremia levels typical of the untreated WT group. A fourth patient's MDR infection yielded low viremia (<50 to 500 copies/ml) for 5 years despite his having phenotypic resistance to all antiretroviral drugs in his treatment regimen. In two of these PHI cases, a rebound to higher levels of plasma viremia only occurred when the M184V mutation in reverse transcriptase could no longer be detected and, in a third case, nondetection of M184V was associated with an inability to isolate virus. To further evaluate the fitness of MDR variants acquired in PHI, MDR and corresponding WT viruses were isolated from index and source partners, respectively. Although MDR viral infectivity (50% tissue culture infective dose) was comparable to that observed for WT viruses, MDR infections in each case demonstrated 2-fold and 13-to 23-fold reductions in p24 antigen and reverse transcriptase enzymatic activity, respectively. In dual-infection competition assays, MDR viruses consistently demonstrated a marked replicative disadvantage compared with WT virus. These results indicate that MDR viruses that are generated following PHI can establish persistent infections as dominant quasispecies despite their impaired replicative competence.The transmission of dual-and triple-class multidrug resistance (MDR) to newly infected persons has been previously reported in several primary human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) infection (PHI) cohort studies (3,17,25,34). The virological implications are of serious concern, since MDR can result in treatment failure and clinical progression (2,5,11,15,22,25,30,32). Indeed, recent case reports indicate that PHI patients with MDR virus do not respond well to antiretroviral drugs (ARVs) (3,14,17,25,34).Nevertheless, cumulative findings indicate that MDR viruses generally show diminished replicative capacity both in vivo and in vitro and should be outcompeted by drug-sensitive wild-type (WT) virus (8, 12, 13, 18-21, 27, 33 To better understand the virological implications of MDR in the PHI setting, this study evaluated the persistence and replicative fitness of MDR virus in four newly infected i...