New test for HIV drug resistance
MIL/Agencies, Jan 8, 2007.
January 08, 2007 - A test to detect drug-resistant HIV strains in patients could allow more effective treatment of the virus.
It is more sensitive than existing methods, meaning resistant viruses can be detected at very low levels in patients' blood.
This could allow doctors to give patients the most appropriate treatment earlier than is currently possible.
The test, developed by Duke University Medical Centre, North Carolina, is reported in the journal Nature Methods.
The HIV genes mutate very quickly so that most people infected with HIV have many different forms of the virus in their bodies.
In some cases the mutated strains can become resistant to HIV drugs, making treatment ineffective.
Professor Feng Gao, who helped develop the new test, or assay, said: "Which resistant viruses are at hand can have important implications for the successful treatment of that patient."
He said there are already tests available to test for drug-resistant strains in patients, but these are time consuming and can only detect resistant strains when they are present at high levels in the patient's bloodstream.
If the new test is developed for clinical use as Professor Gao hopes, it would enable such strains, even if present at only low levels, to be identified quickly in patients.
They could then be treated with the most appropriate drugs from a very early stage to prevent drug resistant virus particles building up.
Roger Pebody, treatment specialist for the Terrence Higgins Trust, said: "Current tests for resistance to HIV drugs are expensive and hard to interpret.
"This means that only one in three people are offered them, despite guidelines encouraging their use.
"If this research leads to a simpler and more easily used resistance test, it will improve treatment outcomes for people living with HIV."
http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/health/6233343.stm
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