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  HIV/AIDS & Health > Treatment > Starting Antiviral Therapy

To Treat or Not to Treat?

Deciding When to Start Antiviral Therapy

 

Deciding when to start antiviral medication is one of the most confusing HIV treatment decisions there is. Obviously, monitoring your immune system with CD4 cell tests and viral load counts is important so that you can get some idea of when your body might need chemical reinforcement against the virus. If you have symptoms of AIDS or advanced HIV illness, most Western doctors agree you should take anti-HIV drugs. If you have 350 T-cells or less, most guidelines recommend that you consider anti-HIV drugs. Even these guidelines are regularly reexamined and updated, in light of new information and new drugs available to fight HIV. The federal government posts their recommendations at www.aidsinfo.nih.gov and GMHC's Treatment Education Adherence Program has regular forums to help you understand some of the issues (see our Calendar of Events).

In general, most guidelines recommend that treatment should be offered if you are asymptomatic and your T-cell count is less than 350 or your viral load is 55,000 PCR, 30,000 bDNA. If you have symptoms (AIDS, thrush, unexplained fever), guidelines recommend treatment. If you are having symptoms of new HIV infection, many doctors also recommend immediate treatment through a clinical trial.

  Tcell VL Treatment
asymptomatic above 350 below 55,000 PCR
30,000 BDNA
treatment not recommended
asymptomatic below 350 above 55,000 PCR
30,000 BDNA
treatment recommended
symptomatic* any any treatment recommended
acute infection any any treatment recommended through a clinical trial.

* Symptomatic includes anything from thrush, shingles, or oral hairy leukoplakia to PCP, CMV, or MAC.

If, however, you have a low amount of HIV in your blood, no symptoms, and a CD4 cell count of more than 350, the benefits of early treatment are less proven. Most experts would wait and monitor your immune system. Though we know that medications can reduce viral load, we don't know how long that reduction will last. Many people with AIDS, and people who treat them, wrestle with the question of how early to start, and whether starting medications early might mean wasting an opportunity to get the benefits later.

Complicating the decision is the fact that, in most doctors' minds, HIV treatment is forever: a lifelong commitment to taking medications which have side effects, are expensive, and require complicated changes in diet or daily routine. If your body doesn't tolerate the drugs, or you can't manage to do what you need to do in order to use them correctly, starting treatment can do more harm than good. Missing doses can allow HIV to become resistant to drugs, meaning that what you do today could limit future options tomorrow. Some people find that the anti-HIV drugs make them feel sick, when they'd previously always felt fine. On the other hand, you may lower your viral load substantially if you put up with a few side effects, and some doctors think that the earlier you start, the better chance you have of staying healthy.

While some doctors may push you to get treatment as soon as possible, they may not know the situation in your life as well as you do. If you haven't told your live-in partner you're positive, for example, is it realistic to start a medication that you have to keep in the refrigerator at home? If you don't have health insurance, might you be able to connect with ADAP, the AIDS Drug Assistance Program, to help you pay for your medications?

Unless you're experiencing symptoms of primary infection (flu-like symptoms, also known as seroconversion syndrome), HIV has probably been in your body for a while. Taking the time to make the right treatment decision is going to be helpful, rather than harmful, in the long run. On the other hand, if you've recently been infected, there is some evidence that starting immediately may be beneficial.

Finally, many people with HIV — including those on medications and those who feel they can afford to wait — have found nutrition, acupuncture, and stress reduction useful as complementary approaches. If you are experiencing side effects from medication, definitely check out ways to minimize them so that you can keep up regular dosing, and keep levels of HIV down.

Howard Grossman, MD, an AIDS specialist, suggests the following questions as a way of assessing whether you're ready to start treatment:

  • What are the chances of your suffering significant disease progression in the next couple of years, based on your CD4 and viral load numbers over the preceding few lab tests? (One reading is not enough on which to base treatment recommendations; at least two, possibly three, should be analyzed.)

  • Can you commit to taking medications every day - at least twice a day - for the foreseeable future and not miss doses?

  • How will medications affect your work and home schedules?

  • Has your doctor discussed all the possible side effects and what to do if they occur? Are you willing to endure those side effects until possible remedies can be found?

  • Has your doctor discussed what the next step would be if you find you cannot tolerate the medications?

  • Can you be open and truthful with your doctor about your medication-taking habits, missed doses, recreational drug use, etc.? (If not, perhaps you need to find a new doctor.)

What can you do to decide?

Learn all you can, stay up to date, and find a doctor you trust. Since a lot of medical information is complicated, you might want to check out GMHC's HIV/AIDS Glossary for help with the technical terms. Choosing a combination that will work for you may be as important as the decision to begin treatment in the first place, so it's best to get informed before taking a drug. Our Links page contains numerous sources of information. Project Inform, aidsinfonet.org and AIDSmeds.com are other good Web sites.

 

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