HIV resistance testing: Difference between revisions
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The emergence of resistance to one or more antiretroviral drugs is one of the more common reasons for therapeutic failure in the treatment of HIV. In addition, the emergence of resistance to one antiretroviral drug sometimes confers a reduction in or a loss of susceptibility to other or all drugs of the same class. The application of laboratory technologies, such as gene amplification, automated nucleic acid sequencing, and nucleic acid hybridization, and the availability of recombinant viruses for testing phenotypic susceptibility have permitted advances in HIV resistance testing. Many clinicians and investigators are currently using these technologies in the clinical management of HIV. |
Revision as of 20:38, 30 May 2012
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Overview
The emergence of resistance to one or more antiretroviral drugs is one of the more common reasons for therapeutic failure in the treatment of HIV. In addition, the emergence of resistance to one antiretroviral drug sometimes confers a reduction in or a loss of susceptibility to other or all drugs of the same class. The application of laboratory technologies, such as gene amplification, automated nucleic acid sequencing, and nucleic acid hybridization, and the availability of recombinant viruses for testing phenotypic susceptibility have permitted advances in HIV resistance testing. Many clinicians and investigators are currently using these technologies in the clinical management of HIV.