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Dive into the research topics where Alexandra U. Scherrer is active.

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Featured researches published by Alexandra U. Scherrer.


Clinical Infectious Diseases | 2011

Characterization of Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1 (HIV-1) Diversity and Tropism in 145 Patients With Primary HIV-1 Infection

Philip Rieder; Beda Joos; Alexandra U. Scherrer; Herbert Kuster; Dominique L. Braun; Christina Grube; Barbara Niederöst; Christine Leemann; Sara Gianella; Karin J. Metzner; Jürg Böni; Rainer Weber; Huldrych F. Günthard

BACKGROUND In the context of sexual transmission of human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1), current findings suggest that the mucosal barrier is the major site of viral selection, transforming the complex inoculum to a small, homogeneous founder virus population. We analyzed HIV-1 transmission in relation to viral and host characteristics within the Zurich primary HIV-1 infection study. METHODS Clonal HIV-1 envelope sequences (on average 16 clones/patient) were isolated from the first available plasma samples during the early phase of infection from 145 patients with primary HIV-1 infection. Phylogenetic and tropism analyses were performed. Differences of viral diversities were investigated in association with several parameters potentially influencing HIV-1 transmission, eg, concomitant sexually transmitted infections (STIs) and mode of transmission. RESULTS Median viral diversity within env C2-V3-C3 region was 0.39% (range 0.04%-3.23%). Viral diversity did not correlate with viral load, but it was slightly correlated with the duration of infection. Neither transmission mode, gender, nor STI predicted transmission of more heterogeneous founder virus populations that were found in 16 of 145 patients (11%; diversity >1%). Only 2 patients (1.4%) were assuredly infected with CXCR4-tropic HIV-1 within a R5/X4-tropic--mixed population, as revealed and confirmed using several genotypic prediction algorithms and phenotypic assays. CONCLUSIONS Our findings suggest that transmission of multiple HIV-1 variants might be a complex process that is not dependent on mucosal factors alone. CXCR4-tropic viruses can be sexually transmitted in rare instances, but their clinical relevance remains to be determined.


Clinical Infectious Diseases | 2011

Improved Virological Outcome in White Patients Infected With HIV-1 Non-B Subtypes Compared to Subtype B

Alexandra U. Scherrer; Bruno Ledergerber; Viktor von Wyl; Jürg Böni; Sabine Yerly; Thomas Klimkait; Philippe Bürgisser; Andri Rauch; Bernard Hirschel; Matthias Cavassini; Luigia Elzi; Pietro Vernazza; Enos Bernasconi; Leonhard Held; Huldrych F. Günthard

BACKGROUND Antiretroviral compounds have been predominantly studied in human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) subtype B, but only ~10% of infections worldwide are caused by this subtype. The analysis of the impact of different HIV subtypes on treatment outcome is important. METHODS The effect of HIV-1 subtype B and non-B on the time to virological failure while taking combination antiretroviral therapy (cART) was analyzed. Other studies that have addressed this question were limited by the strong correlation between subtype and ethnicity. Our analysis was restricted to white patients from the Swiss HIV Cohort Study who started cART between 1996 and 2009. Cox regression models were performed; adjusted for age, sex, transmission category, first cART, baseline CD4 cell counts, and HIV RNA levels; and stratified for previous mono/dual nucleoside reverse-transcriptase inhibitor treatment. RESULTS Included in our study were 4729 patients infected with subtype B and 539 with non-B subtypes. The most prevalent non-B subtypes were CRF02_AG (23.8%), A (23.4%), C (12.8%), and CRF01_AE (12.6%). The incidence of virological failure was higher in patients with subtype B (4.3 failures/100 person-years; 95% confidence interval [CI], 4.0-4.5]) compared with non-B (1.8 failures/100 person-years; 95% CI, 1.4-2.4). Cox regression models confirmed that patients infected with non-B subtypes had a lower risk of virological failure than those infected with subtype B (univariable hazard ratio [HR], 0.39 [95% CI, .30-.52; P < .001]; multivariable HR, 0.68 [95% CI, .51-.91; P = .009]). In particular, subtypes A and CRF02_AG revealed improved outcomes (multivariable HR, 0.54 [95% CI, .29-.98] and 0.39 [95% CI, .19-.79], respectively). CONCLUSIONS Improved virological outcomes among patients infected with non-B subtypes invalidate concerns that these individuals are at a disadvantage because drugs have been designed primarily for subtype B infections.


Nature Medicine | 2016

Determinants of HIV-1 broadly neutralizing antibody induction.

Peter Rusert; Roger D. Kouyos; Claus Kadelka; Hanna Ebner; Merle Schanz; Michael Huber; Dominique L. Braun; Nathanaël Hozé; Alexandra U. Scherrer; Carsten Magnus; Jacqueline Weber; Therese Uhr; Valentina Cippa; Christian W Thorball; Herbert Kuster; Matthias Cavassini; Enos Bernasconi; Matthias Hoffmann; Alexandra Calmy; Manuel Battegay; Andri Rauch; Sabine Yerly; Vincent Aubert; Thomas Klimkait; Jürg Böni; Jacques Fellay; Roland R. Regoes; Huldrych F. Günthard; Alexandra Trkola

Broadly neutralizing antibodies (bnAbs) are a focal component of HIV-1 vaccine design, yet basic aspects of their induction remain poorly understood. Here we report on viral, host and disease factors that steer bnAb evolution using the results of a systematic survey in 4,484 HIV-1-infected individuals that identified 239 bnAb inducers. We show that three parameters that reflect the exposure to antigen—viral load, length of untreated infection and viral diversity—independently drive bnAb evolution. Notably, black participants showed significantly (P = 0.0086–0.038) higher rates of bnAb induction than white participants. Neutralization fingerprint analysis, which was used to delineate plasma specificity, identified strong virus subtype dependencies, with higher frequencies of CD4-binding-site bnAbs in infection with subtype B viruses (P = 0.02) and higher frequencies of V2-glycan-specific bnAbs in infection with non–subtype B viruses (P = 1 × 10−5). Thus, key host, disease and viral determinants, including subtype-specific envelope features that determine bnAb specificity, remain to be unraveled and harnessed for bnAb-based vaccine design.


Acta Tropica | 2009

Sequential analysis of helminth egg output in human stool samples following albendazole and praziquantel administration

Alexandra U. Scherrer; Marita K. Sjöberg; Alphonse Allangba; Mahamadou Traoré; Laurent K. Lohourignon; Andres B. Tschannen; Eliézer K. N'Goran; Jürg Utzinger

Large-scale administration of anthelminthic drugs currently is the most widely used intervention for controlling morbidity due to schistosomiasis and soil-transmitted helminthiasis. An important issue is drug efficacy monitoring. However, the optimal time points post-treatment for assessing the efficacy of praziquantel against Schistosoma mansoni and albendazole against hookworm infections are not known. Forty-nine schoolchildren infected with S. mansoni and 52 infected with hookworm were treated with a single oral dose of praziquantel (40 mg/kg) and albendazole (400 mg), respectively. Stool samples were collected on 19 occasions over a 44-day post-treatment follow-up period, and two Kato-Katz thick smears per sample were examined at each time point. Both the mean egg counts and observed cure rates varied depending on the time point post-treatment. The highest reduction in the geometric mean egg counts (>97%) and the highest observed cure rate (>97%) of S. mansoni infections were found 15-20 days after praziquantel administration. Among the hookworm-infected children, egg counts decreased rapidly within the first week after albendazole administration (>95%), whereas infection rates showed high and heterogeneous (45.0-71.2%) levels at later time points. Both praziquantel and albendazole were highly efficacious in reducing the overall egg burden of S. mansoni and hookworm, respectively. We suggest that 15-20 days post-treatment is the most appropriate time point for efficacy evaluation of praziquantel against S. mansoni. Although no clear conclusion can be drawn for the optimal timing of efficacy evaluation of albendazole against hookworm, a 2-3-week time frame seems a reasonable compromise. This is justified on logistical grounds (i.e. collection of stool samples only once) and growing emphasis on integrating the control of schistosomiasis and soil-transmitted helminthiasis, including drug efficacy monitoring.


The Journal of Infectious Diseases | 2015

Assessing the Paradox Between Transmitted and Acquired HIV Type 1 Drug Resistance Mutations in the Swiss HIV Cohort Study From 1998 to 2012

Wan-Lin Yang; Roger D. Kouyos; Alexandra U. Scherrer; Jürg Böni; Cyril Shah; Sabine Yerly; Thomas Klimkait; Vincent Aubert; Hansjakob Furrer; Manuel Battegay; Matthias Cavassini; Enos Bernasconi; Pietro Vernazza; Bruno Ledergerber

BACKGROUND Transmitted human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV) drug resistance (TDR) mutations are transmitted from nonresponding patients (defined as patients with no initial response to treatment and those with an initial response for whom treatment later failed) or from patients who are naive to treatment. Although the prevalence of drug resistance in patients who are not responding to treatment has declined in developed countries, the prevalence of TDR mutations has not. Mechanisms causing this paradox are poorly explored. METHODS We included recently infected, treatment-naive patients with genotypic resistance tests performed ≤ 1 year after infection and before 2013. Potential risk factors for TDR mutations were analyzed using logistic regression. The association between the prevalence of TDR mutations and population viral load (PVL) among treated patients during 1997-2011 was estimated with Poisson regression for all TDR mutations and individually for the most frequent resistance mutations against each drug class (ie, M184V/L90M/K103N). RESULTS We included 2421 recently infected, treatment-naive patients and 5399 patients with no response to treatment. The prevalence of TDR mutations fluctuated considerably over time. Two opposing developments could explain these fluctuations: generally continuous increases in the prevalence of TDR mutations (odds ratio, 1.13; P = .010), punctuated by sharp decreases in the prevalence when new drug classes were introduced. Overall, the prevalence of TDR mutations increased with decreasing PVL (rate ratio [RR], 0.91 per 1000 decrease in PVL; P = .033). Additionally, we observed that the transmitted high-fitness-cost mutation M184V was positively associated with the PVL of nonresponding patients carrying M184V (RR, 1.50 per 100 increase in PVL; P < .001). Such association was absent for K103N (RR, 1.00 per 100 increase in PVL; P = .99) and negative for L90M (RR, 0.75 per 100 increase in PVL; P = .022). CONCLUSIONS Transmission of antiretroviral drug resistance is temporarily reduced by the introduction of new drug classes and driven by nonresponding and treatment-naive patients. These findings suggest a continuous need for new drugs, early detection/treatment of HIV-1 infection.


PLOS Pathogens | 2015

Persistence of Transmitted HIV-1 Drug Resistance Mutations Associated with Fitness Costs and Viral Genetic Backgrounds

Wan-Lin Yang; Roger D. Kouyos; Jürg Böni; Sabine Yerly; Thomas Klimkait; Vincent Aubert; Alexandra U. Scherrer; Mohaned Shilaih; Trevor Hinkley; Christos J. Petropoulos; Sebastian Bonhoeffer; Huldrych F. Günthard

Transmission of drug-resistant pathogens presents an almost-universal challenge for fighting infectious diseases. Transmitted drug resistance mutations (TDRM) can persist in the absence of drugs for considerable time. It is generally believed that differential TDRM-persistence is caused, at least partially, by variations in TDRM-fitness-costs. However, in vivo epidemiological evidence for the impact of fitness costs on TDRM-persistence is rare. Here, we studied the persistence of TDRM in HIV-1 using longitudinally-sampled nucleotide sequences from the Swiss-HIV-Cohort-Study (SHCS). All treatment-naïve individuals with TDRM at baseline were included. Persistence of TDRM was quantified via reversion rates (RR) determined with interval-censored survival models. Fitness costs of TDRM were estimated in the genetic background in which they occurred using a previously published and validated machine-learning algorithm (based on in vitro replicative capacities) and were included in the survival models as explanatory variables. In 857 sequential samples from 168 treatment-naïve patients, 17 TDRM were analyzed. RR varied substantially and ranged from 174.0/100-person-years;CI=[51.4, 588.8] (for 184V) to 2.7/100-person-years;[0.7, 10.9] (for 215D). RR increased significantly with fitness cost (increase by 1.6[1.3,2.0] per standard deviation of fitness costs). When subdividing fitness costs into the average fitness cost of a given mutation and the deviation from the average fitness cost of a mutation in a given genetic background, we found that both components were significantly associated with reversion-rates. Our results show that the substantial variations of TDRM persistence in the absence of drugs are associated with fitness-cost differences both among mutations and among different genetic backgrounds for the same mutation.


Hiv Medicine | 2009

Prevalence of etravirine mutations and impact on response to treatment in routine clinical care: the Swiss HIV Cohort Study (SHCS)

Alexandra U. Scherrer; Barbara Hasse; Von Wyl; Sabine Yerly; Jürg Böni; Philippe Bürgisser; Thomas Klimkait; Heiner C. Bucher; Bruno Ledergerber; Huldrych F. Günthard

Etravirine (ETV) is a novel nonnucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitor (NNRTI) with reduced cross‐resistance to first‐generation NNRTIs, which has been primarily studied in randomized clinical trials and not in routine clinical settings.


Journal of Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndromes | 2010

Implementation of raltegravir in routine clinical practice: selection criteria for choosing this drug, virologic response rates, and characteristics of failures

Alexandra U. Scherrer; Viktor von Wyl; Christof A Fux; Milos Opravil; Heiner C. Bucher; Aurélie Fayet; Laurent A. Decosterd; B. Hirschel; Bettina Khanlari; Sabine Yerly; Thomas Klimkait; Hansjakob Furrer; Bruno Ledergerber; Huldrych F. Günthard

Background:Raltegravir (RAL) achieved remarkable virologic suppression rates in randomized-clinical trials, but today efficacy data and factors for treatment failures in a routine clinical care setting are limited. Methods:First, factors associated with a switch to RAL were identified with a logistic regression including patients from the Swiss HIV Cohort Study with a history of 3 class failure (n = 423). Second, predictors for virologic outcome were identified in an intent-to-treat analysis including all patients who received RAL. Last observation carried forward imputation was used to determine week 24 response rate (HIV-1 RNA ≥ 50 copies/mL). Results:The predominant factor associated with a switch to RAL in patients with suppressed baseline RNA was a regimen containing enfuvirtide [odds ratio 41.9 (95% confidence interval: 11.6-151.6)]. Efficacy analysis showed an overall response rate of 80.9% (152/188), whereas 71.8% (84/117) and 95.8% (68/71) showed viral suppression when stratified for detectable and undetectable RNA at baseline, respectively. Overall CD4 cell counts increased significantly by 42 cells/μL (P < 0.001). Characteristics of failures were a genotypic sensitivity score of the background regimen ≤1, very low RAL plasma concentrations, poor adherence, and high viral load at baseline. Conclusions:Virologic suppression rates in our routine clinical care setting were promising and comparable with data from previously published randomized-controlled trials.


Retrovirology | 2016

Tracing HIV-1 transmission: envelope traits of HIV-1 transmitter and recipient pairs

Corinna S. Oberle; Beda Joos; Peter Rusert; Nottania K. Campbell; David Beauparlant; Herbert Kuster; Jacqueline Weber; Corinne D. Schenkel; Alexandra U. Scherrer; Carsten Magnus; Roger D. Kouyos; Philip Rieder; Barbara Niederöst; Dominique L. Braun; Jovan Pavlovic; Jürg Böni; Sabine Yerly; Thomas Klimkait; Vincent Aubert; Alexandra Trkola; Karin J. Metzner; Huldrych F. Günthard

BackgroundMucosal HIV-1 transmission predominantly results in a single transmitted/founder (T/F) virus establishing infection in the new host despite the generally high genetic diversity of the transmitter virus population. To what extent HIV-1 transmission is a stochastic process or driven by selective forces that allow T/F viruses best to overcome bottlenecks in transmission has not been conclusively resolved. Building on prior investigations that suggest HIV-1 envelope (Env) features to contribute in the selection process during transmission, we compared phenotypic virus characteristics of nine HIV-1 subtype B transmission pairs, six men who have sex with men and three male-to-female transmission pairs.ResultsAll recipients were identified early in acute infection and harbored based on extensive sequencing analysis a single T/F virus allowing a controlled analysis of virus properties in matched transmission pairs. Recipient and transmitter viruses from the closest time point to transmission showed no signs of selection for specific Env modifications such as variable loop length and glycosylation. Recipient viruses were resistant to circulating plasma antibodies of the transmitter and also showed no altered sensitivity to a large panel of entry inhibitors and neutralizing antibodies. The recipient virus did not consistently differ from the transmitter virus in terms of entry kinetics, cell–cell transmission and replicative capacity in primary cells. Our paired analysis revealed a higher sensitivity of several recipient virus isolates to interferon-α (IFNα) which suggests that resistance to IFNα cannot be a general driving force in T/F establishment.ConclusionsWith the exception of increased IFNα sensitivity, none of the phenotypic virus properties we investigated clearly distinguished T/F viruses from their matched transmitter viruses supporting the notion that at least in subtype B infection HIV-1 transmission is to a considerable extent stochastic.


AIDS | 2014

Limited clinical benefit of minority K103N and Y181C-variant detection in addition to routine genotypic resistance testing in antiretroviral therapy-naive patients

Karin J. Metzner; Alexandra U. Scherrer; Viktor von Wyl; Jürg Böni; Sabine Yerly; Thomas Klimkait; Vincent Aubert; Hansjakob Furrer; Hans H. Hirsch; Pietro Vernazza; Matthias Cavassini; Alexandra Calmy; Enos Bernasconi; Rainer Weber; Huldrych F. Günthard

Objective:The presence of minority nonnucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitor (NNRTI)-resistant HIV-1 variants prior to antiretroviral therapy (ART) has been linked to virologic failure in treatment-naive patients. Design:We performed a large retrospective study to determine the number of treatment failures that could have been prevented by implementing minority drug-resistant HIV-1 variant analyses in ART-naïve patients in whom no NNRTI resistance mutations were detected by routine resistance testing. Methods:Of 1608 patients in the Swiss HIV Cohort Study, who have initiated first-line ART with two nucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitors (NRTIs) and one NNRTI before July 2008, 519 patients were eligible by means of HIV-1 subtype, viral load and sample availability. Key NNRTI drug resistance mutations K103N and Y181C were measured by allele-specific PCR in 208 of 519 randomly chosen patients. Results:Minority K103N and Y181C drug resistance mutations were detected in five out of 190 (2.6%) and 10 out of 201 (5%) patients, respectively. Focusing on 183 patients for whom virologic success or failure could be examined, virologic failure occurred in seven out of 183 (3.8%) patients; minority K103N and/or Y181C variants were present prior to ART initiation in only two of those patients. The NNRTI-containing, first-line ART was effective in 10 patients with preexisting minority NNRTI-resistant HIV-1 variant. Conclusion:As revealed in settings of case–control studies, minority NNRTI-resistant HIV-1 variants can have an impact on ART. However, the implementation of minority NNRTI-resistant HIV-1 variant analysis in addition to genotypic resistance testing (GRT) cannot be recommended in routine clinical settings. Additional associated risk factors need to be discovered.

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