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. Author manuscript; available in PMC: 2011 Mar 28.
Published in final edited form as: AIDS. 2010 Feb 20;24(4):557–561. doi: 10.1097/QAD.0b013e3283346e60

Table 1.

NVP resistance detected in plasma and breast milk samples (Uganda, 2003–2004)*.

ID Subtype Plasma
4 weeks
Breast milk
4 weeks
Breast milk
10 weeks
64 D K103N WT
117 A V106A WT
52 D G190A WT
5 D K103N+G190A WT
79 D Y181C+Y188C WT

42 A WT G190A WT
17 D WT Y188C WT
8 A WT Y181C Failed
69 A WT K103N WT

39 D Y181C Y181C WT
3 R Y181C+Y188C Y188C K103N
23 D K103N+Y181C Y181C WT
77 R K103N+Y181C K103N WT
30 D K103N+Y181C+Y188C K103N+Y181C+Y188C K103N+G190A
13 D K103N+V106A+Y188C K103N No sample
24 C K103N+Y181C+Y188C+G190A K103N+Y181C+Y188C+G190A K103N
22 A K103N+V106A+Y181C+G190A K103N+V106A+G190A K103N
*

Thirteen women had no NVP resistance mutations detected in plasma or breast milk. Results are shown for the 17 women who had at least one NVP resistance mutation detected in either sample. R indicates inter-subtype recombinant; wild type (WT) indicates no resistance mutations detected.