Title: HIVAIDS Surveillance and Targeted Epidemiological Studies Plan
1HIV-1 Drug Resistance Genotyping Dried Blood
Spots Compared with Plasma
Paul Sandstrom National HIV and Retrovirology
Laboratories Centre for Infectious Disease
Prevention and Control, Public Health Agency of
Canada
2The Problem
- While plasma and serum specimens are considered
the gold standard for genotyping, they are not
practical for many resource-limited settings and
unsuitable for serving remote populations. - logistic difficulties,
- lack of a cold chain
- lack of secure sample transport/transport of
dangerous goods , - requirement for trained phlebotomist
- restricted field collection may introduce
sampling bias - Expense
- Laboratory required for pre-storage specimen
processing - Compliance from research subjects
3DBS in HIV Surveillance and Monitoring
- DBS have been reported in peer reviewed
scientific - literature to be suitable for
- HIV serology
- HIV molecular diagnostics
- HIV viral RNA quantification (viral load).
- CD4 lymphocyte enumeration
- However because DBS remain non traditional
specimens for commercial kit - based testing, proficiency testing programs will
be required.
4Objectives
- To assess the feasibility of genotyping HIV-1
from DBS collected in the field and stored under
extreme environmental conditions - Concordance between sequences as well as DR
genotypes obtained from plasma vs DBS - No attempt to delineate the nature of the genetic
material (RNA vs DNA) being preferentially
amplified from DBS.
5Study Design
- Part of a large WHO survey to evaluate prevalence
of HIVDR in 10 testing and counselling (TC)
sites in Central Mexico - Prospectively collected paired plasma and DBS
from consecutive newly diagnosed, ARV-naïve HIV
Mexican subjects (n558). - Whole blood (EDTA anticoagulated) was spotted
onto SS 903 cards, dried at room temperature and
stored with desiccant at 37C and 87 humidity
for 3 months in sealed plastic bags.
6Laboratory MethodsAmplification and Sequencing
of DBS
- Amplification of the protease and RT regions of
the pol gene based on an in house nested RT-PCR
method. - Target template was amplified in two overlapping
pieces using Qiagen OneStep RT-PCR - Nested PCR was performed using AmpliTaq Gold
(ABI) in 50ul reactions containing 5ul RT-PCR
product - Viral load determination in the matched plasma
specimen for those DBS that could not generate
PCR products (Amplicor HIV-1 Monitor)
7Primers used to amplify the protease and RT
regions
DBS specimens not producing PCR products using a
first primer set were attempted with a second set
under the same condition indicated above.
8MethodsAmplification and Sequencing of DBS
- All specimens for which PCR products for both the
protease and the RT regions could be generated
were sequenced (BigDye v3.1 (ABI) and run on an
ABI Prism 3100 analyzer). - Sequences were aligned to HXB2 pol reference
sequence using SeqScape software (ABI) and a
contiguous sequence generated. - Sequences were queried against the Stanford
University HIV Drug Resistance Database
9Phylogentic analysis confirmed that all matched
plasma and DBS specimens originated from the
same individual and that no PCR contamination
occurred
Neighbor-Joining with bootstrap resampling
10Results
- 90.1 of all DBS specimens could be amplified in
at least one region (compared to 100 for
plasma). - 78.2 amplified in both PR and RT regions
- For DBS which could not be amplified (n14),
plasma viral load ranged from 4,580 to gt100,000
copies/ml - All DBS that produced a PCR product were
successfully sequenced. - Excellent agreement between paired DBS/plasma
sequences (99.90 complete concordance across
entire sequence).
11Major mutations associated with resistance
detected in 101 matched DBS and plasma specimens
12ConclusionGenotyping
- For specimens in which drug resistance mutations
were identified, detection of mutant amino acids
were completely concordant in 94.2 of pairs,
with the remaining differences being represented
as partial discordances - May represent an intrinsic randomness of results
generated during the sequencing of non-clonal PCR
products - In the case of DBS nucleic acid extracts, the
relative contribution of archival variants
contained within the proviral DNA reservoir may
be responsible for the generation of mixed base
positions not observed in plasma.
13ConclusionsSuccess Rate-PCR
- The observed differences between DBS and plasma
amplification rates may be due to the independent
or combined effects of several factors including - Differences in primers and amplification
conditions employed at each site - Lower sample volume used for the extraction of
DBS (100 ul) as compared to plasma (200-500 ul) - The partial degradation of RNA could have
occurred under extreme storage conditions.
14Conclusions General
- DBS appear to be a promising public health tool
for HIVDR surveillance of treatment-naïve
subjects, especially in regions where specimens
might be exposed to severe environmental
conditions. - More study is needed to validate DBS for patient
monitoring. - Suitability of DBS for commercial genotyping
assays remains under investigation
15Acknowledgments
- World Health Organization
- Silvia Bertagnolio
- Donald Sutherland
- Instituto Nacional Ciencias Medicas, México
- Luis Soto-Ramirez
- Roberto Rodriguez
- Monica Viveros
- Luis Fuentes
- BC Centre for Excellence
- Richard Harrigan
- Theresa Mo
- Public Health Agency of Canada
- Richard Pilon
- Linda Ares