Low-abundance drug resistant variant patterns among HIV-1 patients with virological failure in Uganda
Abstract
Background: The emergence and spread of antiretroviral drug resistant HIV-1 variants is one
of the major factors responsible for therapeutic failure in persons living with HIV (PLWH) as
it jeopardizes the efforts to reduce the progression of AIDS. While Sanger sequencing is the
conventional method for HIV drug resistance testing, it is unable to detect low-abundance
variants. This study aimed to detect as well as study the mutation burden of the HIV-1 variants
conferring resistance to first line antiretroviral drugs among HIV-1 patients with virological
failure in Uganda.
Methods: Blood samples were collected from 60 PLWH on first- line ART to detect for the
presence of low-abundance drug resistance variants using NGS of HIV protease and reverse
transcriptase genes. Sanger sequencing was performed for all the samples for validation
purpose. We used the HyDRA bioinformatics pipeline to analyze for the drug resistance
mutations and Stanford HIV drug resistance database for interpretations of the variants.
Results: Out of the 60 samples, 58 passed the quality check and were considered for analysis.
Low-abundance HIV drug resistance variants were identified in 38 out of the 58 samples
(65.5%). Overall, we found 757 variants from the NGS data and 90 variants from the Sanger
sequencing data sets. The most prevalent low-abundance variants present in the samples were
K65R (65.5%), K14R, K45R, L63P and I64V identified in 63.79% of the samples and I15V,
K70R, V77I and L283I identified in 60.3% of the samples.
Conclusion: Findings from the study revealed that 65.5% of the sampled population harbored
low-abundance HIV-1 variants, most of which were previously reported to cause virological
failure and consequently antiviral drug resistance.
Key words: HIV, Drug resistance testing, Low-abundance (minority) variants, Sanger
sequencing, Next-generation sequencing