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Articles tagged with: Didanosine

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[ by and | Jul 7, 2011 1:52 pm | No Comment ]
Antiretroviral Therapy May Increase Risk Of Diabetes

Results of a recent review indicate that people with HIV are at an increased risk of pre-diabetes and diabetes, particularly if they are on antiretroviral therapy. The authors also found that more research is needed on the most effective way to treat diabetes in HIV-positive patients.

Based on their results, the review authors recommended that people with HIV receive routine screening for diabetes before starting antiretroviral therapy, three to six months after starting therapy, and once a year thereafter.

Diabetes is a chronic disease marked by high levels of sugar…

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[ by | Jul 4, 2011 10:08 am | No Comment ]

New Jersey Assembly Votes To Restore ADAP Funding – New Jersey’s state Assembly has passed a bill to reverse earlier state restrictions on income requirements for its AIDS Drug Assistance Program (ADAP). The bill would restore eligibility to people with HIV whose incomes are five times the federal poverty level, or $55,150. The previous budget, signed last June, restricted the program to people whose incomes were three times the poverty level, or $32,490. The bill must still be signed by Governor Chris Christie before it can become law. For more information, please see the related article at NorthJersey.com.

Massachusetts Considers Legalizing Medical Marijuana – Lawmakers in Massachusetts have sponsored a bill that would legalize medical marijuana in the state. The proposed bill would allow patients suffering from certain medical conditions, including HIV and AIDS, to legally carry four ounces of marijuana or keep up to 24 plants in a secure, locked facility. The bill would also require users to register with the state’s Department of Public Health and would provide for the creation of 19 state-regulated dispensaries. For more information, please see the article in the Boston Herald.

AIDS Healthcare Foundation Asks FDA Not To Approve Truvada For HIV Prevention – The AIDS Healthcare Foundation (AHF), a California-based AIDS activist and treatment group, has sent a letter to the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) asking it not to approve the drug Truvada (tenofovir/emtricitabine) for prevention of HIV transmission. The drug has been shown to reduce infection risk when taken daily by HIV-negative men who have sex with men. AHF argues that the drug is not effective enough and that approval would encourage more risky sexual behavior and promote the spread of drug-resistant HIV. For more information, please see the article in the PharmaLetter.

Bristol-Myers Squibb Signs Agreement To Bring Reyataz To Sub-Saharan Africa And India – Bristol-Myers Squibb announced this week that it has signed an agreement with Matrix Laboratories Limited to allow Matrix to produce the protease inhibitor Reyataz (atazanavir), as well as the older drugs stavudine (Zerit) and didanosine (Videx), in sub-Saharan Africa and India. The agreement will include provisions for pediatric dosages of didanosine and Reyataz. The agreement is part of Bristol-Myers Squibb’s “Global Access Program,” which is intended to expand access to HIV drugs in developing countries. For more information, please see the Bristol-Myers Squibb press release.

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[ by and | Jun 30, 2011 9:10 am | No Comment ]
NRTIs May Cause Premature Aging In People With HIV

Results from a recent small study indicate that certain nucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitors, particularly zidovudine, stavudine, didanosine, and zalcitabine, may cause irreversible premature aging in people with HIV. Signs of premature aging were found even in people who were no longer taking the NRTIs.

“What is surprising…is that patients who came off the medication many years ago may still be vulnerable to these changes,” said Professor Patrick Chinnery, lead author of the study, in a press release.

The aging appears to be caused by damage to cells’ energy production units,…

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[ by | May 5, 2011 4:37 pm | No Comment ]
Nerve Damage Is Still A Common Complication In People With HIV

Results of a recent study indicate that, despite improved antiretroviral treatment, nerve damage is still a common complication in people with HIV. The study also found that older age, use of certain antiretroviral drugs, and a history of diabetes are prominent risk factors associated with nerve damage.

“[Nerve damage] is still a prevalent disease in HIV-infected patients, despite virologic control and improved immune function associated with initiation of combination antiretroviral therapies,” said Scott Evans, a senior research scientist at the Harvard School of Public Health and lead author of the…

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[ by | Jun 11, 2010 2:55 pm | Comments Off ]
UNITAID Warns Factory Closure May Risk Lives Of Infants Living With HIV/AIDS

International aid organization UNITAID has expressed “deep concern” with the closure this month of a manufacturing plant in France that produces small-dosage didanosine (Videx) tablets for infants.

The closure of the Bristol-Myers Squibb facility is currently expected to halt production of the tablets until a new manufacturing site opens in April of 2011.

In an open letter to Bristol-Myers Squibb, UNITAID, an international organization that helps developing countries purchase treatments for HIV/AIDS, requested the company respond with an appropriate solution.

“Closing this factory means that 4,000 to 7,000 babies currently…

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