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You are here : Home/ AIDS Factsheet/ Laboratory Tests/ HIV Resistance Testing
HIV Resistance TestingBackground Information -What is AIDS? -HIV Testing -Acute HIV Infection -How HIV Drugs Get Approved -HIV Life Cycle Laboratory Tests -Normal Laboratory Values -Complete Blood Count (CBC) -Chemistry Panel -Blood Sugar and Fats -CD4 (T-cell) Tests -Viral Load Tests -HIV Resistance Testing -Monitoring Drug Levels Preventing HIV Infection -Stopping the Spread of HIV -How Risky Is It? -Condoms -Drug Use and HIV -Harm Reduction and HIV -Treatment After Microbicides -Microbicides Living with HIV -Choosing an HIV Care Provider -Medical Appointments -Telling Others You are HIV Positive -Participating in a Clinical Trial -How to Spot HIV/AIDS Fraud -Vaccinations and HIV -Medications to Fight HIV -HIV Life Cycle -Taking Current Antiretroviral Drugs -What Is Antiretroviral Therapy (ART)? -Adherence -Treatment Interruptions -Drug Interactions -Strengthening the Immune System -Immune Therapies in Development -Immune Restoration -Interleukin-2 -Immune Restoration Syndrome -Opportunistic Infections -Opportunistic Infections Side Effects and Their Treatments -Side Effects -Fatigue -Anemia -Body Shape Changes (Lipodystrophy) -Diarrhea -Peripheral Neuropathy -Mitochondrial Toxicity -Bone Problems -Depression and HIV Patient Populations -Women and HIV -Pregnancy and HIV aids -Children and HIV -Older People and HIV Alternative and Complementary Therapies -Alternative and Complementary Therapies -Ayurvedic Medicine -Chinese Acupuncture -Chinese Herbalism -Cat's Claw -DHEA -DNCB (Dinitrochlorobenzene) -Echinacea -Essiac -Marijuana -Silymarin (Milk Thistle) -Nutrition -Nutrition -Vitamins and Minerals -Exercise and HIV -Smoking and HIV
HIV is "resistant" to a drug if it keeps multiplying rapidly while you are taking the drug. Changes (mutations) in the virus cause resistance. HIV mutates almost every time a new copy is made. Not every mutation causes resistance. The "wild type" virus is the most common form of HIV. Anything different from the wild type is considered a mutation.
Phenotypic testing A sample of HIV is grown in the laboratory. A dose of one antiviral drug is added. The growth rate of the HIV is compared to the rate of wild type virus. If the sample grows more than normal, it is resistant to the medication. Phenotypic resistance is reported as "fold" resistance. If the test sample grows twenty times as much as normal, it has "20-fold resistance". Phenotypic tests cost about $800. It used to take over a month to get the results. New phenotypic tests are somewhat quicker. Genotypic testing The genetic code of the sample virus is compared to the wild type. The code is a long chain of molecules called nucleotides. Each group of three nucleotides, called a "codon", defines a particular amino acid used to build a new virus. Mutations are described by a combination of letters and numbers, for example K103N. The first letter (K) is the code for the amino acid in the wild type virus. The number (103) identifies the position of the codon. The second letter (N) is the code for the "changed" amino acid in the mutant sample. Genotypic testing costs about $250. Results come back in about two weeks. Virtual phenotype This test is really a method of interpreting genotypic test results. First, genotypic testing is done on the sample. Phenotypic test results for other virus samples with a similar genotypic pattern are taken from a database. These matched samples tell you how the virus is likely to behave. The virtual phenotype is faster and less expensive than a phenotypic test. Cross-resistance Sometimes a mutant version of HIV is resistant to more than one drug. When this happens, the drugs are called "cross-resistant". For example, most HIV that is resistant to nevirapine (Viramune) is also resistant to efavirenz (Sustiva). This means that nevirapine and efavirenz are cross-resistant. Cross-resistance is important when you change medications. You need to choose new drugs that are not cross-resistant to drugs you've already taken. We do not totally understand cross-resistance. However, many drugs are at least partly cross-resistant. As HIV develops more mutations, it gets harder to control. Take every dose of your antiviral medications according to instructions. This reduces the risk of resistance and cross-resistance. It saves the most options for changing medications in the future. Problems with resistance testing Resistance tests are not available everywhere. They are expensive. However, they are becoming more common, faster and cheaper. The tests aren't good at detecting "minority" mutations (less than 20% of the virus population.) Also, they work better when the viral load is higher. If your viral load is very low, the tests might not work. Tests usually cannot be run if the patient's viral load is less than 500 to 1,000 copies per ml. Test results can be difficult to understand. Drugs that should work according to the tests sometimes don't work, and vice versa. Sometimes genotypic and phenotypic tests give conflicting results for the same patient. Some mutations can "reverse" or reduce resistance to some medications. Despite these problems, many researchers believe that resistance testing should be a normal part of HIV treatment. More physicians will probably use resistance testing before choosing someone's first antiviral medications to see if they were infected by drug-resistant virus. You are here : Home/ AIDS Factsheet/ Laboratory Tests/ HIV Resistance Testing |
Related pages AIDS Fact sheet - Adherence Antireteroviral Theraphy Treatment Interruptions Rapid Replication and Mutation of HIV Laboratory Tests |
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