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Journal of Clinical Microbiology, July 2000, p. 2726-2730, Vol. 38, No. 7
Departments of Virology, Pharmacology, and Infectious
Diseases, Pitié-Salpêtrière
Hospital,1 Department of
Pharmacology, Bichat Claude Bernard
Hospital,2 Department of Internal
Medecine, Kremlin Bicêtre Hospital,4
and HIV Clinical Department,
ROCHE-FRANCE,3 Paris, France
Received 14 December 1999/Returned for modification 22 February
2000/Accepted 8 May 2000
The MIKADO trial was designed to evaluate the efficacy of
stavudine-zalcitabine-saquinavir (soft gel capsule)
[d4T-ddC-SQV(SGC)] in 36 naive patients (
0095-1137/00/$04.00+0
Copyright © 2000, American Society for Microbiology. All rights reserved.
Early Virological Failure in Naive Human Immunodeficiency Virus
Patients Receiving Saquinavir (Soft Gel Capsule)-Stavudine-Zalcitabine
(MIKADO Trial) Is Not Associated with Mutations Conferring
Viral Resistance
3.3 log10
units at week 24 [W24]). Among the 29 patients remaining on
d4T-ddC-SQV(SGC) until W24, 10 harbored a virological failure (viral
load of >200 copies/ml at W24) (group 1). To determine the reasons for
therapeutic failure, genotypic and phenotypic resistance test results
and SQV concentrations in plasma were analyzed and compared to those in
successfully treated patients (viral load of <200 copies/ml at W24)
(group 2). Reverse transcriptase and protease genotypic analyses in
group 1 revealed the acquisition of only one SQV-associated mutation (L90M) in only two patients. There was no significant increase in the
50 or 90% inhibitory concentration of SQV in patients with or without
the L90M mutation. However, the fact that two patients developed an
L90M mutation only 4 weeks after relapse points to the need for
genotypic resistance testing in the context of an initial failure of
the antiretroviral regimen. At W24, the median SQV concentration in
group 1 (71 ng/ml) was significantly lower than in group 2 (475 ng/ml),
and the plasma SQV concentration was correlated with the viral load at
W24 (r =
0.5; P < 0.05) and with
the drop in viral load between day 0 and W24 (r =
0.5; P < 0.01). These results and the fact that the
plasma SQV concentrations in the two groups prior to relapse (W12) were
not significantly different strongly suggest that the early failure of
this combination is not due to viral resistance but to a lack of
compliance, pharmacological variability, and drug interactions or a
combination of these factors.
*
Corresponding author. Mailing address: Department of
Virology, CERVI, Pitié-Salpêtrière Hospital, 47-83 Bd
de l'Hôpital, 75651 Paris Cedex 13, France. Phone:
33.1.42.17.74.01. Fax: 33.1.42.17.74.11. E-mail:
vincent.calvez{at}psl.ap-hop-paris.fr.
The members of The MIKADO Study Group are A. Abbed, S. Auger, C. Aquilina, P. Bardot, Y. Benhamou, L. Benslama, M. Bonhomme, D. Costagliola, B. Dumon, M. Dupon, E. Dussaix, V. Ferre, H. Fleury, J. Gasnault, J. Izopet, E. Klein, D. Lacoste, I. Lecuyer, D. Michaut, J. L. Pellegrin, G. Pialoux, F. Raffi, J. M. Ragnaud, G. Raguin, D. Vittecoq, S. Khalifa, M. T. Rannou, A. Sandre, and I. Mbadi.
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