The
human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) changes (mutates)
often. Sometimes these changes make the virus resistant to a particular
medicine or class of medicines, which means the medicine is no longer effective
against the virus. When this happens, the medicine no longer controls virus
growth (replication) or protects the
immune system.
If you start taking antiretroviral medicines early in the course of
your infection, before your
CD4+ cell counts have dropped and before your
viral load has increased, you may "cycle through" all
the available medicines. In this case, you may exhaust all the available
medicines and have no options left when your viral load and CD4+ counts are at
their worst.
Resistance testing is done to determine whether resistance has caused
treatment to fail and to identify antiretroviral medicines that can be used to
treat the infection. There are many reasons that treatment fails, such
as:
- The virus is initially resistant to one or more antiretroviral
medicines, or the virus mutates and stops responding to the
medicines.
- There is a change in the way your body absorbs a
medicine.
- There are interactions between two or more medicines that
you are taking.
- You have not taken your medicine as
prescribed.
Two tests are available to detect resistance to medicines used to
treat HIV infections:
- Genotyping assays detect
medicine resistance mutations in the viral genes. It takes 1 to 2 weeks to get
the results.
- Phenotyping assays measure the
ability of viruses to grow in cells with various concentrations of
antiretroviral medicines. It takes 2 to 3 weeks to get the results.
Both of these tests are done on a sample of blood taken from a vein.
These tests may not be accurate if the resistant virus is less than 20% of the
circulating virus.
You may be tested for resistance when:
- You develop symptoms of HIV infection. The
symptoms may be similar to an upper respiratory tract infection, the flu, or
another viral illness.
- Your viral load has not decreased by at
least one-half after 4 weeks of therapy.
- Your viral load has not
decreased to a undetectable level within 4 to 6 months of beginning treatment.
An undetectable level is defined as less than 50 copies/mL (by bDNA or RT-PCR
test method).
- Your viral load is detectable after having been at an
undetectable level.
If resistance has occurred, your doctor may need to change your
antiretroviral medicines.