Article

When to start ART in the setting of acute AIDS-related opportunistic infections: the time is now!

Stanford University, Stanford, CA, USA.
Current HIV/AIDS Reports 06/2012; 9(3):251-8. DOI:10.1007/s11904-012-0126-8 pp.251-8
Source: PubMed

ABSTRACT Despite the substantial benefits of combination antiretroviral therapy (ART), a significant proportion of HIV-infected individuals still present with advanced disease and active AIDS-related opportunistic infections (OIs). The weight of evidence from recent studies supports the early initiation of ART (ie, within 2 weeks of initiating treatment for the acute OIs). Initiating ART early in acutely ill patients can reduce AIDS-related progression and death. Early ART has not been associated with increased rates of immune reconstitution inflammatory syndrome in prospective studies of non-tuberculosis OIs, although this concern is frequently cited as a reason to delay ART. Nor has early ART been associated with increased adverse outcomes. Nonetheless, initiating ART early in acute care settings can be challenging to implement and requires a well-coordinated multidisciplinary team with expertise in ART management.

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Keywords

2 weeks
 
active AIDS-related opportunistic infections
 
acute care settings
 
acutely ill patients
 
adverse outcomes
 
AIDS-related progression
 
ART management
 
combination antiretroviral therapy
 
HIV-infected individuals
 
immune reconstitution inflammatory syndrome
 
initiating treatment
 
prospective studies
 
recent studies
 
significant proportion
 
substantial benefits
 
well-coordinated multidisciplinary team
 

Philip M Grant