Second-Line HIV Treatment

Individuals who have HIV and who have never taken medication for it are considered to be "treatment naive." The first combination of medicines that a patient receives is known as her first-line treatment, with each successive combination being numbered as the next treatment line. New treatment lines are given when the current combination is considered to have failed to slow or stop the progress of infection.

  1. Failure of the First-Line Treatment

    • The first combination or drug "cocktail" that an HIV-positive individual is given will generally not be her last. There are several reasons that first-line treatment can fail, including less-than-perfect adherence to the medication schedule and adaptation of the virus to the treatment. The majority of first-line treatment combinations will fail.

    Indications of Treatment Failure

    • A treatment is considered to have failed if viral load counts go up and CD4 counts go down in three consecutive sets of blood work. Once a treatment line has failed, a new treatment combination must be administered.

    Timing of Second-Line Treatments

    • If a first-line treatment combination has failed, it is important to start a new one as soon as possible. A second-line treatment will likely have been developed before the third set of blood work has been completed so that it can be administered quickly to get the virus back under control.

    Failure of Second-Line Treatments

    • First-line treatments are not the only treatment line that can fail to control HIV. Second-line treatments can fail as well and, in fact, are twice as likely to fail as the original treatment. Despite this, they are an important part of maintaining low viral loads and high CD4 cell counts for as long as possible.

    Third-Line Treatments and Beyond

    • If a second-line treatment fails, a third-line treatment will not be far behind. Additional treatment lines with new combinations will be given should the third-line treatment eventually fail as well. New HIV medications are developed almost every year, giving doctors a nearly limitless arsenal of drugs that can be combined to help keep an HIV infection under control.

Related Searches:

References

You May Also Like

  • Types of HIV Treatment

    HIV treatment in 2009 looks a lot different than it did even five or 10 years ago. While we seem to be...

  • Haart Medication for HIV Patients

    HIV is a difficult virus to treat and no vaccine has been developed. One approach is to combine two or three treatments...

  • How to Conduct HIV Testing

    With all of the successful medical research to create helpful treatment for people who are infected with HIV, more and more people...

  • What Are the Treatments for Drug Resistant TB?

    Drug-resistant tuberculosis is a term for strains of the TB germ that have become immune to the effects of standard drugs used...

  • Initial Treatment for AIDS

    The AIDS epidemic began in the early 1980's when there were no viable treatments for HIV infection. Advances in HIV research have...

  • What Are the Treatments for HIV AIDS?

    HIV (Human Immunodeficiency Virus) is the virus that leads to AIDS, a debilitating immune system condition that leaves the body weakened and...

  • Treatment Aids for Burns

    Prompt treatment of a burn is essential to ensuring that healing occurs without any complications. Basic first aid treatment is the first...

  • How Long Does It Take Before HIV Symptoms Appear?

    HIV-disease has four stages. The first stage and last two are symptomatic, while the second and longest, latency, have no symptoms. The...

  • The Use of Antiretrovirals

    Antiretrovirals are the class of drugs used to treat HIV and AIDS. Though there is no cure for these conditions, the use...

Related Ads

Featured