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      HIV Treatment Adherence, Drug Resistance, Virologic Failure: Evolving Concepts

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          Abstract

          Poor adherence to combined antiretroviral therapy (cART) has been shown to be a major determinant of virologic failure, emergence of drug resistant virus, disease progression, hospitalizations, mortality, and health care costs. While high adherence levels can be achieved in both resource-rich and resource-limited settings following initiation of cART, long-term adherence remains a challenge regardless of available resources. Barriers to optimal adherence may originate from individual (biological, socio-cultural, behavioral), pharmacological, and societal factors. Although patients and providers should continuously strive for maximum adherence to cART, there is accumulating evidence that each class of antiretroviral therapy has specific adherence-drug resistance relationship characteristics allowing certain regimens more flexibility than others. There is not a universally accepted measure for cART adherence, since each method has distinct advantages and disadvantages including cost, complexity, accuracy, precision, intrusiveness and bias. Development of a real-time cART adherence monitoring tool will enable the development of novel, pre-emptive adherence-improving strategies. The application of these strategies may ultimately prove to be the most cost-effective method to reduce morbidity and mortality for the individual and decrease the likelihood of HIV transmission and emergence of resistance in the community.

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          101269158
          32950
          Infect Disord Drug Targets
          Infect Disord Drug Targets
          Infectious disorders drug targets
          1871-5265
          2212-3989
          9 October 2016
          April 2011
          20 October 2016
          : 11
          : 2
          : 167-174
          Affiliations
          [1 ]Departments of International Health and Epidemiology, Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, Baltimore, MD, USA
          [2 ]The Department of Medicine and Centre for Infectious Diseases, Stellenbosch University, Faculty of Health Sciences, Cape Town, South Africa
          [3 ]Department of Pathology, Division of Medical Virology, Stellenbosch University, Faculty of Health Sciences, Cape Town, South Africa
          [4 ]Emory University School of Medicine, Atlanta, Georgia, USA
          [5 ]Denver Public Health and The University of Colorado, Denver, USA
          [6 ]Tufts University School of Medicine, Boston, USA
          [7 ]British of Columbia-Centre for Excellence on HIV/AIDS, University British of Columbia, Vancouver, Canada
          [8 ]Department of Medicine, Division of Infectious Diseases and Center for Clinical Epidemiology and Biostatistics, University of Pennsylvania, School of Medicine, Philadelphia, PA, USA
          Author notes
          [* ]Address correspondence to this author at the Johns Hopkins University, Bloomberg School of Public Health, 615 North Wolfe Street, Suite W5031, Baltimore, Maryland 21205, USA; Tel: +1 410-955-2378; Fax: 410-502-6733, jnachega@ 123456jhsph.edu
          Article
          PMC5072419 PMC5072419 5072419 nihpa821749
          10.2174/187152611795589663
          5072419
          21406048
          d3c91565-a97f-41cc-be5e-cc5747c21528
          History
          Categories
          Article

          HIV,antiretroviral therapy adherence,virologic failure,drug resistance,outcomes

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