Scoring methods for building genotypic scores: an application to didanosine resistance in a large derivation set.

Several attempts have been made to determine HIV-1 resistance from genotype resistance testing. We compare scoring methods for building weighted genotyping scores and commonly used systems to determine whether the virus of a HIV-infected patient is resistant.Three statistical methods (linear discrim...

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Main Authors: Allal Houssaini, Lambert Assoumou, Veronica Miller, Vincent Calvez, Anne-Geneviève Marcelin, Philippe Flandre
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2013-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3605419?pdf=render
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spelling doaj-535713fb05874905866e7050b2d74d392020-11-25T00:18:21ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032013-01-0183e5901410.1371/journal.pone.0059014Scoring methods for building genotypic scores: an application to didanosine resistance in a large derivation set.Allal HoussainiLambert AssoumouVeronica MillerVincent CalvezAnne-Geneviève MarcelinPhilippe FlandreSeveral attempts have been made to determine HIV-1 resistance from genotype resistance testing. We compare scoring methods for building weighted genotyping scores and commonly used systems to determine whether the virus of a HIV-infected patient is resistant.Three statistical methods (linear discriminant analysis, support vector machine and logistic regression) are used to determine the weight of mutations involved in HIV resistance. We compared these weighted scores with known interpretation systems (ANRS, REGA and Stanford HIV-db) to classify patients as resistant or not. Our methodology is illustrated on the Forum for Collaborative HIV Research didanosine database (N = 1453). The database was divided into four samples according to the country of enrolment (France, USA/Canada, Italy and Spain/UK/Switzerland). The total sample and the four country-based samples allow external validation (one sample is used to estimate a score and the other samples are used to validate it). We used the observed precision to compare the performance of newly derived scores with other interpretation systems. Our results show that newly derived scores performed better than or similar to existing interpretation systems, even with external validation sets. No difference was found between the three methods investigated. Our analysis identified four new mutations associated with didanosine resistance: D123S, Q207K, H208Y and K223Q.We explored the potential of three statistical methods to construct weighted scores for didanosine resistance. Our proposed scores performed at least as well as already existing interpretation systems and previously unrecognized didanosine-resistance associated mutations were identified. This approach could be used for building scores of genotypic resistance to other antiretroviral drugs.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3605419?pdf=render
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Allal Houssaini
Lambert Assoumou
Veronica Miller
Vincent Calvez
Anne-Geneviève Marcelin
Philippe Flandre
spellingShingle Allal Houssaini
Lambert Assoumou
Veronica Miller
Vincent Calvez
Anne-Geneviève Marcelin
Philippe Flandre
Scoring methods for building genotypic scores: an application to didanosine resistance in a large derivation set.
PLoS ONE
author_facet Allal Houssaini
Lambert Assoumou
Veronica Miller
Vincent Calvez
Anne-Geneviève Marcelin
Philippe Flandre
author_sort Allal Houssaini
title Scoring methods for building genotypic scores: an application to didanosine resistance in a large derivation set.
title_short Scoring methods for building genotypic scores: an application to didanosine resistance in a large derivation set.
title_full Scoring methods for building genotypic scores: an application to didanosine resistance in a large derivation set.
title_fullStr Scoring methods for building genotypic scores: an application to didanosine resistance in a large derivation set.
title_full_unstemmed Scoring methods for building genotypic scores: an application to didanosine resistance in a large derivation set.
title_sort scoring methods for building genotypic scores: an application to didanosine resistance in a large derivation set.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2013-01-01
description Several attempts have been made to determine HIV-1 resistance from genotype resistance testing. We compare scoring methods for building weighted genotyping scores and commonly used systems to determine whether the virus of a HIV-infected patient is resistant.Three statistical methods (linear discriminant analysis, support vector machine and logistic regression) are used to determine the weight of mutations involved in HIV resistance. We compared these weighted scores with known interpretation systems (ANRS, REGA and Stanford HIV-db) to classify patients as resistant or not. Our methodology is illustrated on the Forum for Collaborative HIV Research didanosine database (N = 1453). The database was divided into four samples according to the country of enrolment (France, USA/Canada, Italy and Spain/UK/Switzerland). The total sample and the four country-based samples allow external validation (one sample is used to estimate a score and the other samples are used to validate it). We used the observed precision to compare the performance of newly derived scores with other interpretation systems. Our results show that newly derived scores performed better than or similar to existing interpretation systems, even with external validation sets. No difference was found between the three methods investigated. Our analysis identified four new mutations associated with didanosine resistance: D123S, Q207K, H208Y and K223Q.We explored the potential of three statistical methods to construct weighted scores for didanosine resistance. Our proposed scores performed at least as well as already existing interpretation systems and previously unrecognized didanosine-resistance associated mutations were identified. This approach could be used for building scores of genotypic resistance to other antiretroviral drugs.
url http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3605419?pdf=render
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