The success of combination antiretroviral therapy in the treatment ofHIV-1-positive individuals has shifted clinical attention toward combination antiretroviral drug regimens that optimize tolerability, long-term safety, and durable efficacy.Wherever patients have access to treatment, morbidity and mortality are increasingly driven by non-HIV-associated comorbidities, which may be observed earlier than in age-matched controls and despite the best available combination antiretroviral therapy. Similarly, HIV-1-positive individuals are now diagnosed and treated earlier with anticipated lifelong therapy. The contribution of specific antiretroviral agents to long-term morbidity and mortality is dependent on the pharmacologic characteristics of these agents, and it is increasingly important in this context.
CITATION STYLE
Atta, M. G., De Seigneux, S., & Lucas, G. M. (2019). Clinical pharmacology in HIV therapy. Clinical Journal of the American Society of Nephrology, 14(3), 435–444. https://doi.org/10.2215/CJN.02240218
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