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Dive into the research topics where Huldrych F. Günthard is active.

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Featured researches published by Huldrych F. Günthard.


JAMA | 2008

Antiretroviral treatment of adult HIV infection: 2014 recommendations of the International Antiviral Society-USA Panel.

Huldrych F. Günthard; Judith A. Aberg; Joseph J. Eron; Jennifer Hoy; Amalio Telenti; Constance A. Benson; David M. Burger; Pedro Cahn; Joel E. Gallant; Marshall J. Glesby; Peter Reiss; Michael S. Saag; David L. Thomas; Donna M. Jacobsen; Paul A. Volberding

CONTEXT Recent data regarding the consequences of untreated human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) infection and the expansion of treatment choices for antiretroviral-naive and antiretroviral-experienced patients warrant an update of the International AIDS Society-USA guidelines for the use of antiretroviral therapy in adults with HIV infection. OBJECTIVES To provide updated recommendations for management of HIV-infected adults, using antiretroviral drugs and laboratory monitoring tools available in the international, developed-world setting. This report provides guidelines for when to initiate antiretroviral therapy, selection of appropriate initial regimens, patient monitoring, when to change therapy, and what regimens to use when changing. DATA SOURCES AND STUDY SELECTION A panel with expertise in HIV research and clinical care reviewed relevant data published or presented at selected scientific conferences since the last panel report through April 2010. Data were identified through a PubMed search, review of scientific conference abstracts, and requests to antiretroviral drug manufacturers for updated clinical trials and adverse event data. DATA EXTRACTION AND SYNTHESIS New evidence was reviewed by the panel. Recommendations were drafted by section writing committees and reviewed and edited by the entire panel. The quality and strength of the evidence were rated and recommendations were made by full panel consensus. CONCLUSIONS Patient readiness for treatment should be confirmed before initiation of antiretroviral treatment. Therapy is recommended for asymptomatic patients with a CD4 cell count < or = 500/microL, for all symptomatic patients, and those with specific conditions and comorbidities. Therapy should be considered for asymptomatic patients with CD4 cell count > 500/microL. Components of the initial and subsequent regimens must be individualized, particularly in the context of concurrent conditions. Patients receiving antiretroviral treatment should be monitored regularly; treatment failure should be detected and managed early, with the goal of therapy, even in heavily pretreated patients, being HIV-1 RNA suppression below commercially available assay quantification limits.


Gastroenterology | 2010

Genetic variation in IL28B is associated with chronic hepatitis C and treatment failure: a genome-wide association study.

Andri Rauch; Zoltán Kutalik; Patrick Descombes; Tao Cai; Julia di Iulio; Tobias Mueller; Murielle Bochud; Manuel Battegay; Enos Bernasconi; Jan Borovicka; Sara Colombo; Andreas Cerny; Jean-François Dufour; Hansjakob Furrer; Huldrych F. Günthard; Markus H. Heim; Bernard Hirschel; Raffaele Malinverni; Darius Moradpour; Beat Müllhaupt; Andrea Witteck; Jacques S. Beckmann; Thomas Berg; Sven Bergmann; Francesco Negro; Amalio Telenti; Pierre-Yves Bochud

BACKGROUND & AIMS Hepatitis C virus (HCV) induces chronic infection in 50% to 80% of infected persons; approximately 50% of these do not respond to therapy. We performed a genome-wide association study to screen for host genetic determinants of HCV persistence and response to therapy. METHODS The analysis included 1362 individuals: 1015 with chronic hepatitis C and 347 who spontaneously cleared the virus (448 were coinfected with human immunodeficiency virus [HIV]). Responses to pegylated interferon alfa and ribavirin were assessed in 465 individuals. Associations between more than 500,000 single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) and outcomes were assessed by multivariate logistic regression. RESULTS Chronic hepatitis C was associated with SNPs in the IL28B locus, which encodes the antiviral cytokine interferon lambda. The rs8099917 minor allele was associated with progression to chronic HCV infection (odds ratio [OR], 2.31; 95% confidence interval [CI], 1.74-3.06; P = 6.07 x 10(-9)). The association was observed in HCV mono-infected (OR, 2.49; 95% CI, 1.64-3.79; P = 1.96 x 10(-5)) and HCV/HIV coinfected individuals (OR, 2.16; 95% CI, 1.47-3.18; P = 8.24 x 10(-5)). rs8099917 was also associated with failure to respond to therapy (OR, 5.19; 95% CI, 2.90-9.30; P = 3.11 x 10(-8)), with the strongest effects in patients with HCV genotype 1 or 4. This risk allele was identified in 24% of individuals with spontaneous HCV clearance, 32% of chronically infected patients who responded to therapy, and 58% who did not respond (P = 3.2 x 10(-10)). Resequencing of IL28B identified distinct haplotypes that were associated with the clinical phenotype. CONCLUSIONS The association of the IL28B locus with natural and treatment-associated control of HCV indicates the importance of innate immunity and interferon lambda in the pathogenesis of HCV infection.


Clinical Infectious Diseases | 2008

Antiretroviral Drug Resistance Testing in Adult HIV-1 Infection: 2008 Recommendations of an International AIDS Society-USA Panel

Martin S. Hirsch; Huldrych F. Günthard; Jonathan M. Schapiro; Françoise Brun Vézinet; Bonaventura Clotet; Scott M. Hammer; Victoria A. Johnson; Daniel R. Kuritzkes; John W. Mellors; Deenan Pillay; Patrick Yeni; Donna M. Jacobsen; Douglas D. Richman

Resistance to antiretroviral drugs remains an important limitation to successful human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) therapy. Resistance testing can improve treatment outcomes for infected individuals. The availability of new drugs from various classes, standardization of resistance assays, and the development of viral tropism tests necessitate new guidelines for resistance testing. The International AIDS Society-USA convened a panel of physicians and scientists with expertise in drug-resistant HIV-1, drug management, and patient care to review recently published data and presentations at scientific conferences and to provide updated recommendations. Whenever possible, resistance testing is recommended at the time of HIV infection diagnosis as part of the initial comprehensive patient assessment, as well as in all cases of virologic failure. Tropism testing is recommended whenever the use of chemokine receptor 5 antagonists is contemplated. As the roll out of antiretroviral therapy continues in developing countries, drug resistance monitoring for both subtype B and non-subtype B strains of HIV will become increasingly important.


Nature Medicine | 2005

Delay of HIV-1 rebound after cessation of antiretroviral therapy through passive transfer of human neutralizing antibodies

Alexandra Trkola; Herbert Kuster; Peter Rusert; Beda Joos; Marek Fischer; Christine Leemann; Amapola Manrique; Michael Huber; Manuela Rehr; Annette Oxenius; Rainer Weber; Gabriela Stiegler; Brigitta Vcelar; Hermann Katinger; Leonardo Aceto; Huldrych F. Günthard

To determine the protective potential of the humoral immune response against HIV-1 in vivo we evaluated the potency of three neutralizing antibodies (2G12, 2F5 and 4E10) in suppressing viral rebound in six acutely and eight chronically HIV-1–infected individuals undergoing interruption of antiretroviral treatment (ART). Only two of eight chronically infected individuals showed evidence of a delay in viral rebound during the passive immunization. Rebound in antibody-treated acutely infected individuals upon cessation of ART was substantially later than in a control group of 12 individuals with acute infection. Escape mutant analysis showed that the activity of 2G12 was crucial for the in vivo effect of the neutralizing antibody cocktail. By providing further direct evidence of the potency, breadth and titers of neutralizing antibodies that are required for in vivo activity, these data underline both the potential and the limits of humoral immunity in controlling HIV-1 infection.


Lancet Infectious Diseases | 2011

Effect of transmitted drug resistance on virological and immunological response to initial combination antiretroviral therapy for HIV (EuroCoord-CHAIN joint project): a European multicohort study

Linda Wittkop; Huldrych F. Günthard; Frank de Wolf; David Dunn; Alessandro Cozzi-Lepri; Andrea De Luca; Claudia Kücherer; Niels Obel; Viktor von Wyl; Bernard Masquelier; Christoph Stephan; Carlo Torti; Andrea Antinori; Federico García; Ali Judd; Kholoud Porter; Rodolphe Thiébaut; Hannah Castro; Ard van Sighem; Céline Colin; Jesper Kjaer; Jens D. Lundgren; Roger Paredes; Anton Pozniak; Bonaventura Clotet; Andrew N. Phillips; Deenan Pillay; Geneviève Chêne

BACKGROUND The effect of transmitted drug resistance (TDR) on first-line combination antiretroviral therapy (cART) for HIV-1 needs further study to inform choice of optimum drug regimens. We investigated the effect of TDR on outcome in the first year of cART within a large European collaboration. METHODS HIV-infected patients of any age were included if they started cART (at least three antiretroviral drugs) for the first time after Jan 1, 1998, and were antiretroviral naive and had at least one sample for a genotypic test taken before the start of cART. We used the WHO drug resistance list and the Stanford algorithm to classify patients into three resistance categories: no TDR, at least one mutation and fully-active cART, or at least one mutation and resistant to at least one prescribed drug. Virological failure was defined as time to the first of two consecutive viral load measurements over 500 copies per mL after 6 months of therapy. FINDINGS Of 10,056 patients from 25 cohorts, 9102 (90·5%) had HIV without TDR, 475 (4·7%) had at least one mutation but received fully-active cART, and 479 (4·8%) had at least one mutation and resistance to at least one drug. Cumulative Kaplan-Meier estimates for virological failure at 12 months were 4·2% (95% CI 3·8-4·7) for patients in the no TDR group, 4·7% (2·9-7·5) for those in the TDR and fully-active cART group, and 15·1% (11·9-19·0) for those in the TDR and resistant group (log-rank p<0·0001). The hazard ratio for the difference in virological failure between patients with TDR and resistance to at least one drug and those without TDR was 3·13 (95% CI 2·33-4·20, p<0·0001). The hazard ratio for the difference between patients with TDR receiving fully-active cART and patients without TDR was 1·47 (95% CI 0·19-2·38, p=0·12). In stratified analysis, the hazard ratio for the risk of virological failure in patients with TDR who received fully-active cART that included a non-nucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitor (NNRTI) compared with those without TDR was 2·0 (95% CI 0·9-4·7, p=0·093). INTERPRETATION These findings confirm present treatment guidelines for HIV, which state that the initial treatment choice should be based on resistance testing in treatment-naive patients. FUNDING European Communitys Seventh Framework Programme FP7/2007-2013 and Gilead.


PLOS Pathogens | 2012

Whole genome deep sequencing of HIV-1 reveals the impact of early minor variants upon immune recognition during acute infection

Matthew R. Henn; Christian L. Boutwell; Patrick Charlebois; Niall J. Lennon; Karen A. Power; Alexander R. Macalalad; Aaron M. Berlin; Christine M. Malboeuf; Elizabeth Ryan; Sante Gnerre; Michael C. Zody; Rachel L. Erlich; Lisa Green; Andrew Berical; Yaoyu Wang; Monica Casali; Hendrik Streeck; Allyson K. Bloom; Tim Dudek; Damien C. Tully; Ruchi M. Newman; Karen L. Axten; Adrianne D. Gladden; Laura Battis; Michael Kemper; Qiandong Zeng; Terrance Shea; Sharvari Gujja; Carmen Zedlack; Olivier Gasser

Deep sequencing technologies have the potential to transform the study of highly variable viral pathogens by providing a rapid and cost-effective approach to sensitively characterize rapidly evolving viral quasispecies. Here, we report on a high-throughput whole HIV-1 genome deep sequencing platform that combines 454 pyrosequencing with novel assembly and variant detection algorithms. In one subject we combined these genetic data with detailed immunological analyses to comprehensively evaluate viral evolution and immune escape during the acute phase of HIV-1 infection. The majority of early, low frequency mutations represented viral adaptation to host CD8+ T cell responses, evidence of strong immune selection pressure occurring during the early decline from peak viremia. CD8+ T cell responses capable of recognizing these low frequency escape variants coincided with the selection and evolution of more effective secondary HLA-anchor escape mutations. Frequent, and in some cases rapid, reversion of transmitted mutations was also observed across the viral genome. When located within restricted CD8 epitopes these low frequency reverting mutations were sufficient to prime de novo responses to these epitopes, again illustrating the capacity of the immune response to recognize and respond to low frequency variants. More importantly, rapid viral escape from the most immunodominant CD8+ T cell responses coincided with plateauing of the initial viral load decline in this subject, suggestive of a potential link between maintenance of effective, dominant CD8 responses and the degree of early viremia reduction. We conclude that the early control of HIV-1 replication by immunodominant CD8+ T cell responses may be substantially influenced by rapid, low frequency viral adaptations not detected by conventional sequencing approaches, which warrants further investigation. These data support the critical need for vaccine-induced CD8+ T cell responses to target more highly constrained regions of the virus in order to ensure the maintenance of immunodominant CD8 responses and the sustained decline of early viremia.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2008

HIV rebounds from latently infected cells, rather than from continuing low-level replication

Beda Joos; Marek Fischer; Herbert Kuster; Satish K. Pillai; Joseph K. Wong; Jürg Böni; Bernard Hirschel; Rainer Weber; Alexandra Trkola; Huldrych F. Günthard

Rapid rebound of plasma viremia in patients after interruption of long-term combination antiretroviral therapy (cART) suggests persistence of low-level replicating cells or rapid reactivation of latently infected cells. To further characterize rebounding virus, we performed extensive longitudinal clonal evolutionary studies of HIV env C2-V3-C3 regions and exploited the temporal relationships of rebounding plasma viruses with regard to pretreatment sequences in 20 chronically HIV-1-infected patients having undergone multiple 2-week structured treatment interruptions (STI). Rebounding virus during the short STI was homogeneous, suggesting mono- or oligoclonal origin during reactivation. No evidence for a temporal structure of rebounding virus in regard to pretreatment sequences was found. Furthermore, expansion of distinct lineages at different STI cycles emerged. Together, these findings imply stochastic reactivation of different clones from long-lived latently infected cells rather than expansion of viral populations replicating at low levels. After treatment was stopped, diversity increased steadily, but pretreatment diversity was, on average, achieved only >2.5 years after the start of STI when marked divergence from preexisting quasispecies also emerged. In summary, our results argue against persistence of ongoing low-level replication in patients on suppressive cART. Furthermore, a prolonged delay in restoration of pretreatment viral diversity after treatment interruption demonstrates a surprisingly sustained evolutionary bottleneck induced by punctuated antiretroviral therapy.


The Journal of Infectious Diseases | 2005

Effect of Treatment, during Primary Infection, on Establishment and Clearance of Cellular Reservoirs of HIV-1

Matthew C. Strain; Susan J. Little; Eric S. Daar; Diane V. Havlir; Huldrych F. Günthard; Ruby Y. Lam; Otto A. Daly; Juin Nguyen; Caroline C. Ignacio; Celsa A. Spina; Douglas D. Richman; Joseph K. Wong

Patients in whom virologic suppression is achieved with highly active antiretroviral therapy (HAART) retain long-lived cellular reservoirs of human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1); this retention is an obstacle to sustained control of infection. To assess the impact that initiating treatment during primary HIV-1 infection has on this cell population, we analyzed the decay kinetics of HIV-1 DNA and of infectivity associated with cells activated ex vivo in 27 patients who initiated therapy before or <6 months after seroconversion and in whom viremia was suppressed to <50 copies/mL. The clearance rates of cellular reservoirs could not be distinguished by these techniques (median half-life, 20 weeks) during the first year of HAART. The clearance of HIV-1 DNA slowed significantly during the subsequent 3 years of treatment (median half-life, 70 weeks), consistent with heterogeneous cellular reservoirs being present. Total cell-associated infectivity (CAI) after 1 year of treatment was undetectable (<0.07 infectious units/million cells [IUPM]) in most patients initiating treatment during primary infection either before (9/9) or <6 months after (6/8) seroconversion. In contrast, all 17 control patients who initiated HAART during chronic infection retained detectable CAI after 3-6 years of treatment (median reservoir size, 1.1 IUPM; P<.0005). These results suggest that treatment <6 months after seroconversion may facilitate long-term control of cellular reservoirs that maintain HIV-1 infection during treatment.


Clinical Pharmacology & Therapeutics | 2007

Predictive value of known and novel alleles of CYP2B6 for efavirenz plasma concentrations in HIV-infected individuals.

Margalida Rotger; H Tegude; Sara Colombo; Matthias Cavassini; Hansjakob Furrer; Laurent Decosterd; Julia Blievernicht; T Saussele; Huldrych F. Günthard; Matthias Schwab; Michel Eichelbaum; Amalio Telenti; Ulrich M. Zanger

To assess the association of CYP2B6 allelic diversity with efavirenz (EFV) pharmacokinetics, we performed extensive genotyping of 15 relevant single nucleotide polymorphism in 169 study participants, and full resequencing of CYP2B6 in individuals with abnormal EFV plasma levels. Seventy‐seven (45.5%) individuals carried a known (CYP2B6★6,★11,★15, or ★18) or new loss/diminished‐function alleles. Resequencing defined two new loss‐of‐function alleles: allele ★27 (marked by 593T>C [M198T]), that results in 85% decrease in enzyme activity and allele ★28 (marked by 1132C>T), that results in protein truncation at arginine 378. Median AUC levels were 188.5 μg h/ml for individuals homozygous for a loss/diminished‐function allele, 58.6 μg h/ml for carriers, and 43.7 μg h/ml for noncarriers (P<0.0001). Individuals with a poor metabolizer genotype had a likelihood ratio of 35 (95% CI, 11–110) of presenting very high EFV plasma levels. CYP2B6 poor metabolizer genotypes explain to a large extent EFV pharmacokinetics and identify individuals at risk of extremely elevated EFV plasma levels.


Lancet Infectious Diseases | 2009

Virological monitoring and resistance to first-line highly active antiretroviral therapy in adults infected with HIV-1 treated under WHO guidelines: a systematic review and meta-analysis

Ravindra K. Gupta; Andrew Hill; Anthony W. Sawyer; Alessandro Cozzi-Lepri; Viktor von Wyl; Sabine Yerly; Viviane D. Lima; Huldrych F. Günthard; Charles F. Gilks; Deenan Pillay

Antiretroviral-therapy rollout in resource-poor countries is often associated with limited, if any, HIV-RNA monitoring. The effect of variable monitoring on the emergence of resistance after therapy with commonly used drug combinations was assessed by systematic review of studies reporting resistance in patients infected with HIV with a CD4 count of fewer than 200 cells per muL treated with two nucleoside analogues (including a thymidine analogue) and a non-nucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitor. 8376 patients from eight cohorts and two prospective studies were analysed. Resistance at virological failure to non-nucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitors at 48 weeks was 88.3% (95% CI 82.2-92.9) in infrequently monitored patients, compared with 61.0% (48.9-72.2) in frequently monitored patients (p<0.001). Lamivudine resistance was 80.5% (72.9-86.8) and 40.3% (29.1-52.2) in infrequently and frequently monitored patients, respectively (p<0.001); the prevalence of at least one thymidine analogue mutation was 27.8% (21.2-35.2) and 12.1% (5.9-21.4), respectively (p<0.001). Genotypic resistance at 48 weeks to lamivudine, nucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitors (thymidine analogue mutations), and non-nucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitors appears substantially higher in less frequently monitored patients. This Review highlights the need for cheap point-of-care viral-load tests to identify early viral failures and limit the emergence of resistance.

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