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      Surveillance of transmitted resistance to antiretroviral drug classes among young children in the Western Cape Province of South Africa.

      The Pediatric Infectious Disease Journal
      Anti-HIV Agents, pharmacology, Drug Resistance, Viral, genetics, HIV Infections, drug therapy, epidemiology, transmission, virology, HIV-1, drug effects, enzymology, Humans, Infant, Mutation, Population Surveillance, methods, Prevalence, Reverse Transcriptase Inhibitors, South Africa, World Health Organization

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          Abstract

          There are limited data on transmitted antiretroviral resistance in young children who require antiretroviral therapy. We adapted the World Health Organization surveillance strategy, testing antiretroviral naive infants (<18 months) in the Western Cape Province of South Africa, and detecting only 3 non-nucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitors (NNRTI) and no NRTI or protease inhibitor surveillance mutations in 49 patients. The estimated NRTI and protease inhibitor transmitted antiretroviral resistance prevalence is low (<5%), predicting good therapeutic response in Western Cape infants.

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