To investigate the different clusters of mutations associated with lamivudine resistance
in HBV genotypes D and A.
HBV reverse transcriptase sequences of 89 HBV-infected patients failing lamivudine
treatment were analyzed. The association of mutations with HBV genotypes was assessed
by Chi-Squared test and multivariate logistic regression analysis. Covariate analysis
was based on hierarchical clustering.
In genotype A, the rtM204V (prevalence: 68.2%) was the main sign of lamivudine failure.
Multivariate analysis confirmed that genotype A is the only predictor for rtM204V
emergence (OR: 14.5 [95% CI: 1.3-158], P=0.02). Covariate analysis showed that rtM204V
clusters with rtL180M, rtL229V (corresponding to sF220L in the HBsAg), and, interestingly,
with HBsAg mutation sS207N (bootstrap=0.95). Both sF220L and sS207N co-localized in
the fourth transmembrane HBsAg domain. In contrast, in genotype D the primary mutations
rtM204V and rtM204I occurred with similar prevalence (39.1% versus 45.3%, P=0.47),
and showed a distinct pattern of compensatory mutations. rtM204V clusters with mutations
localized in the RT-B domain (rtV173L, rtL180M, and rtT184A/S) (bootstrap=0.94), while
rtM204I clusters with mutations localized in the RT-A domain (rtS53N, rtT54Y, and
rtL80I/V) (bootstrap=0.96) (without associations with HBsAg specific mutations).
HBV genotype plays an important role in driving RT evolution under lamivudine treatment,
and thus can be relevant for therapeutic sequencing, immunological response and disease
progression.