Managing antiretroviral therapy: Changing regimens, resistance testing, and the risks from structured treatment interruptions

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Abstract

The management of patients receiving therapy for human immunodeficiency virus infection has improved in recent years owing to factors such as new classes of antiretroviral drugs, new agents in existing classes, and reduced resistance rates when chronically infected patients begin treatment with preferred regimens. Transmitted resistance variants in ∼10% of treatment-naive patients underline the need for pretreatment resistance testing, to improve rates of virologic efficacy. Structured treatment interruptions to reduce drug exposure and toxicity should not be used outside well-controlled research studies, since this practice has been associated with increased rates of death and disease progression. © 2008 by the Infectious Diseases Society of America. All rights reserved.

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Eron, J. J. (2008, May 15). Managing antiretroviral therapy: Changing regimens, resistance testing, and the risks from structured treatment interruptions. Journal of Infectious Diseases. https://doi.org/10.1086/533418

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