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Test could improve HIV treatment

Duke researchers have developed a test that better detects drug-resistant strains of the virus

- Staff Writer

Published: Mon, Jan. 08, 2007 12:00AM

Modified Mon, Jan. 08, 2007 06:53AM

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A new test that detects whether patients with HIV/AIDS are infected with even small amounts of drug-resistant forms of the virus has been developed by researchers at Duke University Medical Center.

The discovery, published online Sunday in the journal Nature Methods, may help doctors more accurately predict which medicines will work for patients and which drugs will ultimately fail. Current tests only pick up drug-resistant strains if they represent a significant portion of the virus circulating in a person's bloodstream.

Detecting resistance more quickly would make it possible to keep patients healthy longer, reduce treatment costs and even help cut an infected person's risk of spreading HIV to others. When drug treatment fails, the virus proliferates in the blood of infected people, causing them to become more contagious.

HIV/AIDS IN NORTH CAROLINA

While the nation's rate of HIV disease has largely stabilized, HIV/AIDS is still a growing epidemic in this state. The AIDS case rate in North Carolina rose 60 percent between 2000 and 2004, compared with a 4 percent increase nationally.

Here are some facts about the disease in North Carolina in 2005:

* The overall HIV disease infection rate in the state was 21.1 cases per 100,000 residents. That translates to an estimated 29,500 residents with either HIV or AIDS, including people who are not aware they are infected.

* New HIV/AIDS infections were diagnosed in 1,806 people.

* The rate for blacks was seven times the rate for whites, at 61.4 cases per 100,000 compared with 8.6 per 100,000.

* The highest rate of infection was among black men, with 88.6 cases per 100,000.

N.C. DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND HUMAN SERVICES

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"This can be huge," Dr. Feng Gao, a Duke HIV/AIDS researcher and co-author of the journal article, said of the new genetic test. Gao's lab at Duke perfected the testing process and conducted the experiments to prove its accuracy and sensitivity.

To date, the new test has been used for research purposes only, but Duke is seeking patents that will enable it to develop a diagnostic screening for future commercial use. Duke does not yet have a private industry backer, and still must show through other studies that the process helps improve treatment outcomes.

"A lot of questions are still unanswered, but it's an important step forward," said Dr. Peter Leone, an HIV/AIDS doctor at UNC-Chapel Hill and medical director of the state's HIV prevention branch. If the test pans out, Leone said, it would "improve the odds that the first course of treatment is going to be successful."

The issue of mutation

Unchecked by drugs, HIV reproduces in an infected person's body at a dizzying rate. A single virus can make billions of copies of itself each day. The virus is not meticulous about making accurate copies, so tiny errors -- mutations -- occur as HIV replicates.

When a patient takes antiretroviral drugs, the medicines kill the most prevalent strains of virus, allowing the mutations to survive and proliferate. Some of those mutations help HIV resist drugs.

Duke's new test comes amid rising evidence that HIV drug resistance is a problem, even among patients who have never been treated with antiretroviral drugs.

Studies have found that 15 percent or more of patients newly diagnosed with HIV harbor drug-resistant strains of the virus.

Such findings helped prompt the federal government, which publishes national guidelines setting standards of care for patients with HIV disease, to begin recommending routine drug-resistance testing for newly diagnosed patients. The change, which took effect last year, means most public and private insurance companies now cover resistance testing, which costs several hundred dollars per test -- and $1,000 or more per test for certain types.

Even the less sensitive tests available now are helpful in avoiding treatment pitfalls, said Dr. Charles Hicks, a Duke infectious disease specialist who treats patients with HIV/AIDS and is a co-author of the journal article. A common mutant strain picked up by such tests resists one of the first-line treatments for HIV, he said. If patients test positive for that type of drug-resistant strain, doctors know to prescribe other medicines.

"It makes you choose a totally different treatment path," Hicks said.

Duke's test represents an improvement on existing laboratory tests because it is more sensitive, detecting resistant strains that make up less than 1 percent of the virus circulating in the patient's blood. Existing tests pick up drug-resistant HIV strains only if they make up 20 percent or more of the total virus in the patient's system.

Staff writer Jean P. Fisher can be reached at 829-4753 or jfisher@newsobserver.com.

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