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Journal ArticleDOI

Virological follow-up of adult patients in antiretroviral treatment programmes in sub-Saharan Africa: a systematic review

TLDR
Profiles of drug resistance suggest that a second-line treatment regimen based on protease inhibitors, with a backbone of nucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitor, is a reasonable option for patients with HIV in sub-Saharan Africa who experience first- line treatment failure.
Abstract
Following large-scale roll-out of antiretroviral therapy in sub-Saharan Africa, the non-clinical efficacy of antiretroviral therapy has received little attention. We aimed to systematically review virological efficacy and drug-resistance outcomes of programmes of antiretroviral therapy in sub-Saharan Africa. 89 studies with heterogeneous design, definitions, and methods were identified. Overall, in on-treatment analysis, 10 351 (78%) of 13 288 patients showed virological suppression after 6 months of antiretroviral therapy, 7413 (76%) of 9794 after 12 months, and 3840 (67%) of 5690 after 24 months. Long-term virological data are scarce. Genotyping results were available for patients with virological failure (HIV-1 RNA greater than 1000 copies per mL). Most patients (839 of 849; 99%) were infected with a non-B HIV-1 subtype. However, drug-resistance patterns were largely similar to those in subtype B. Resistance profiles were associated with the antiretroviral drugs commonly used: the lamivudine-associated M184V mutation was most common, followed by K103N which is associated with non-nucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitors. Thymidine-analogue mutations and the K65R mutation were less common. First-line antiretroviral therapy regimens used in sub-Saharan Africa are effective. Profiles of drug resistance suggest that a second-line treatment regimen based on protease inhibitors, with a backbone of nucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitors, is a reasonable option for patients with HIV in sub-Saharan Africa who experience first-line treatment failure.

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Can the UNAIDS 90-90-90 target be achieved? A systematic analysis of national HIV treatment cascades.

TL;DR: Diosis was the greatest break point globally, but the most frequent key break point for individual countries was providing ART to those diagnosed, and large disparities were identified between countries.
References
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Journal Article

Poor Efficacy and Tolerability of Stavudine, Didanosine, and Efavirenz-based Regimen in Treatment-Naive Patients in Senegal

TL;DR: In this article, the effectiveness and tolerance of an antiretroviral therapy (ART) regimen composed of the ARVs stavudine (d4T) plus didanosine (ddI) plus efavirenz (EFV) in patients with advanced HIV infection in Senegal was studied.

Feasibility and efficacy of HAART among hard-to-reach high-risk women in Burkina Faso

TL;DR: The long-term outcomes of HAART in a cohort of sex workers in Burkina Faso is described, with positive results for HIV-1 infected high-risk women initiated on HAART according to WHO recommendations.
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