The HIV reverse transcriptase and protease sequence database is an on-line relational database that catalogues evolutionary and drug-related sequence variation in the human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) reverse transcriptase (RT) and protease enzymes, the molecular targets of antiretroviral therapy (http://hivdb.stanford.edu). The database contains a compilation of nearly all published HIV RT and protease sequences, including submissions to GenBank, sequences published in journal articles and sequences of HIV isolates from persons participating in clinical trials. Sequences are linked to data about the source of the sequence, the antiretroviral drug treatment history of the person from whom the sequence was obtained and the results of in vitro drug susceptibility testing. Sequence data on two new molecular targets of HIV drug therapy--gp41 (cell fusion) and integrase--will be added to the database in 2003.
Programs that monitor local, national, and regional levels of transmitted HIV-1 drug resistance inform treatment guidelines and provide feedback on the success of HIV-1 treatment and prevention programs. To accurately compare transmitted drug resistance rates across geographic regions and times, the World Health Organization has recommended the adoption of a consensus genotypic definition of transmitted HIV-1 drug resistance. In January 2007, we outlined criteria for developing a list of mutations for drug-resistance surveillance and compiled a list of 80 RT and protease mutations meeting these criteria (surveillance drug resistance mutations; SDRMs). Since January 2007, several new drugs have been approved and several new drug-resistance mutations have been identified. In this paper, we follow the same procedures described previously to develop an updated list of SDRMs that are likely to be useful for ongoing and future studies of transmitted drug resistance. The updated SDRM list has 93 mutations including 34 NRTI-resistance mutations at 15 RT positions, 19 NNRTI-resistance mutations at 10 RT positions, and 40 PI-resistance mutations at 18 protease positions.
This list, which should be updated regularly using the same or similar criteria, can be used for genotypic surveillance of transmitted HIV-1 drug resistance.
Understanding the genetic basis of HIV-1 drug resistance is essential to developing new antiretroviral drugs and optimizing the use of existing drugs. This understanding, however, is hampered by the large numbers of mutation patterns associated with crossresistance within each antiretroviral drug class. We used five statistical learning methods (decision trees, neural networks, support vector regression, least-squares regression, and least angle regression) to relate HIV-1 protease and reverse transcriptase mutations to in vitro susceptibility to 16 antiretroviral drugs. Learning methods were trained and tested on a public data set of genotype-phenotype correlations by 5-fold cross-validation. For each learning method, four mutation sets were used as input features: a complete set of all mutations in >2 sequences in the data set, the 30 most common data set mutations, an expert panel mutation set, and a set of nonpolymorphic treatment-selected mutations from a public database linking protease and reverse transcriptase sequences to antiretroviral drug exposure. The nonpolymorphic treatment-selected mutations led to the best predictions: 80.1% accuracy at classifying sequences as susceptible, low͞intermediate resistant, or highly resistant. Least angle regression predicted susceptibility significantly better than other methods when using the complete set of mutations. The three regression methods provided consistent estimates of the quantitative effect of mutations on drug susceptibility, identifying nearly all previously reported genotype-phenotype associations and providing strong statistical support for many new associations. Mutation regression coefficients showed that, within a drug class, crossresistance patterns differ for different mutation subsets and that cross-resistance has been underestimated. antiviral therapy ͉ HIV ͉ linear regression ͉ machine learning T wenty antiretroviral drugs are approved for treating HIV-1 infection: eight protease inhibitors (PIs), seven nucleoside and one nucleotide reverse transcriptase (RT) inhibitors (NRTIs), three nonnucleoside RT inhibitors (NNRTIs), and one fusion inhibitor. Resistance to these drugs is caused by mutations in their molecular targets. Understanding the genetic basis of cross-resistance is essential for designing new antiviral drugs and for using genotypic drug resistance testing to select optimal therapy. Despite the large number of PIs and RT inhibitors, therapy is challenging because drug resistance arises from complex patterns of mutations and because of the high degree of cross-resistance within each drug class.Approaches for using HIV-1 drug resistance mutations to predict changes in drug susceptibility have included decision trees (1), linear regression (2), linear discriminant analysis (3), neural networks (4), and support vector regression (SVR) (5). Here, we compare five statistical learning methods each using four different sets of input mutations to develop quantitative models associating HIV-1 protease and RT mutations with changes in susce...
The effects of many protease inhibitor (PI)-selected mutations on the susceptibility to individual PIs are unknown. We analyzed in vitro susceptibility test results on 2,725 HIV-1 protease isolates. More than 2,400 isolates had been tested for susceptibility to fosamprenavir, indinavir, nelfinavir, and saquinavir; 2,130 isolates had been tested for susceptibility to lopinavir; 1,644 isolates had been tested for susceptibility to atazanavir; 1,265 isolates had been tested for susceptibility to tipranavir; and 642 isolates had been tested for susceptibility to darunavir. We applied least-angle regression (LARS) to the 200 most common mutations in the data set and identified a set of 46 mutations associated with decreased PI susceptibility of which 40 were not polymorphic in the eight most common HIV-1 group M subtypes. We then used least-squares regression to ascertain the relative contribution of each of these 46 mutations. The median number of mutations associated with decreased susceptibility to each PI was 28 (range, 19 to 32), and the median number of mutations associated with increased susceptibility to each PI was 2.5 (range, 1 to 8). Of the mutations with the greatest effect on PI susceptibility, I84AV was associated with decreased susceptibility to eight PIs; V32I, G48V, I54ALMSTV, V82F, and L90M were associated with decreased susceptibility to six to seven PIs; I47A, G48M, I50V, L76V, V82ST, and N88S were associated with decreased susceptibility to four to five PIs; and D30N, I50L, and V82AL were associated with decreased susceptibility to fewer than four PIs. This study underscores the greater impact of nonpolymorphic mutations compared with polymorphic mutations on decreased PI susceptibility and provides a comprehensive quantitative assessment of the effects of individual mutations on susceptibility to the eight clinically available PIs.HIV-1 protease inhibitors (PIs) are the mainstays of salvage therapy. As the number of licensed PIs has increased, it has become important to identify whether and how each PI-selected mutation affects cross-resistance to each of the other PIs. In a previous study (41), we previously applied several data mining approaches to assess associations between HIV-1 protease genotype and phenotype test results for the first-generation PIs: amprenavir (APV), the active component of the prodrug fosamprenavir (FPV), atazanavir (ATV), indinavir (IDV), lopinavir (LPV), nelfinavir (NFV), and saquinavir (SQV). Specifically, we used a data set containing about 300 susceptibility results for ATV, 500 for LPV, and 800 for FPV, IDV, NFV, and SQV (41). We used a predefined list of PIselected mutations in this previous study to reduce the number of independent variables influencing PI susceptibility.Here we analyze a data set that contains between 1,600 and 2,600 isolates tested for susceptibility to the first-generation PIs and about 600 and 1,200 isolates tested for susceptibility to darunavir (DRV) and tipranavir (TPV), respectively. We use two regression methods in tandem: one to identi...
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