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[HATIP] #26, March 26 2004: News
A regular electronic newsletter for health care workers and community-based organisations on HIV treatment in resource-limited settings. It is supported by and produced in collaboration with St Stephen's AIDS Trust and the International HIV/AIDS Alliance.

Its publication is also supported by Positive Action of GlaxoSmithKline, Boehringer Ingelheim and the Access 4 Trust.
   Last updated: 19.10.05
News
A selection of news stories which have appeared since March 1 2004 at http://www.aidsmap.com.




The US Department of Health and Human Services has updated its adult antiretroviral treatment guidelines.




Anti-HIV medications can completely suppress Kaposi's sarcoma-associated herpes virus (KSHV) (the virus that causes KS, one of the AIDS-defining cancers) but take at least twelve months to do so, providing an explanation for the remarkable decline in KS seen in resource-rich nations in the post-HAART era, according to an article published in the March 5th issue of AIDS.




Kaletra-associated kidney stones and lithiasis (calculus build-up) have been reported in the March 5th issue of AIDS. Doctors at the Departments of Infectious Diseases and Pharmacology at CHU Nancy, France, report that seven of 165 individuals (4%) experienced either the formation of calculus (e.g. kidney stones), or intense urinary pain on Kaletra-based HAART.




International efforts to combat TB are falling short, despite optimistic statements by the World Health Organisation, because of an international failure to detect TB cases and provide prompt treatment, it emerged today at the Stop TB Partners Fourm in New Delhi, India.




HAART should be used to treat and prevent Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome (SARS) when the next epidemic emerges (a possibility considered likely by many SARS experts) according to an article in the April 1st issue of Clinical Infectious Diseases, which was published online last week.




A key laboratory marker used to measure the success of antibiotic treatment for neurosyphilis is significantly more likely to be abnormal in HIV-positive individuals, particularly those with a low CD4 cell count, than in patients who do not have HIV, according to research published in the April 1st edition of Clinical Infectious Diseases, which is now available on-line.




The use of the boosted protease inhibitor Kaletra (lopinavir/ritonavir) causes an increase in triglyceride and total cholesterol levels, according to a Spanish study which monitored blood lipids in individuals taking the drug after an overnight fast. However, the study found fewer Kaletra-treated individuals with elevated blood lipids than were found in the clinical trials which led to the drug's approval, and the investigators found that the strongest risk factor for the development of abnormal lipids whilst taking Kaletra was the presence of elevated blood fats when treatment with the drug was commenced. The study is published in the April 1st edition of Clinical Infectious Diseases, and is now available on-line.




A study involving HIV-negative men has found that taking Kaletra can result in significant increases in some blood lipids, and suggests that the metabolic effects of protease inhibitors are drug-specific rather than a class effect. The study is published in the March 5th edition of AIDS.




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