Selected article for: "acting injectable and long acting injectable"

Author: Cadiñanos, Julen; Montejano, Rocio; de Miguel Buckley, Rosa; Marcelo, Cristina; Arribas, Jose R
Title: Risks and benefits of reducing the number of drugs to treat HIV-1 infection.
  • Cord-id: k42s9i4p
  • Document date: 2021_2_9
  • ID: k42s9i4p
    Snippet: INTRODUCTION Despite the efficacy and safety of antiretroviral therapy, new treatment options are needed to address the concerns of patients and physicians regarding long-term toxicities, costs, and convenience of lifelong antiretroviral therapy. To achieve this goal, one strategy is to reduce the number of drugs in the antiretroviral regimen. AREAS COVERED We review the recent evidence on the efficacy and safety of reduced drug regimens and their potential risks and benefits. There is currently
    Document: INTRODUCTION Despite the efficacy and safety of antiretroviral therapy, new treatment options are needed to address the concerns of patients and physicians regarding long-term toxicities, costs, and convenience of lifelong antiretroviral therapy. To achieve this goal, one strategy is to reduce the number of drugs in the antiretroviral regimen. AREAS COVERED We review the recent evidence on the efficacy and safety of reduced drug regimens and their potential risks and benefits. There is currently strong evidence showing that some two-drug regimens have a comparable efficacy and short-term safety compared to standard three-drug regimens. The fixed-dose combination of dolutegravir/lamivudine is already an alternative for many treatment-naïve and virologically suppressed HIV-1 infected adults supported by large randomized clinical trials. The co-formulation dolutegravir plus rilpivirine is also a switch strategy for maintenance therapy. Long-acting injectable cabotegravir plus rilpivirine has already regulatory approval, and islatravir plus doravirine is an expected option in the near future. Some two-drug regimens, especially those including maraviroc, have not been as successful. EXPERT OPINION Long-term safety issues of these two-drug regimens remain to be determined, but with the overwhelming evidence available in virological control and short-term safety compared to three-drug regimens, the potential benefits of some of these two-drug regimens appear to outweigh the risks.

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