Project Inform - April, 1998
The wide differences in the reported frequency of occurrence of lipodystrophy may be attributed to varying definitions of the problem or to differences in how carefully patients and physicians look for it. Most researchers reporting on the problem believe that it is not unique to any particular protease inhibitor. The lead researcher of the Australian study believes that the frequency of occurrence is related primarily to the overall potency of the protease inhibitor regimen, with the greatest risk for people using the most potent dual protease combinations and the least for people using the least potent single protease inhibitor (hard gel capsule saquinavir). No one has reported any solution to the problem other than to stop the use of protease inhibitors, not a very practical suggestion for many people. Some individual physicians anecdotally report achieving some success simply changing the protease regimen, but without a controlled study, it is difficult to interpret this phenomenon. For example, they might simply be changing from a more potent to a less potent regimen. For people who have previously developed resistance to drugs like nevirapine and delavirdine, one possible solution might be to switch to a three-drug combination based on efavirenz and two NARTIs, thus eliminating use of a protease inhibitor. In preliminary studies at least, such a combination appears to equal the potency of most three-drug regimens based on a protease inhibitor.
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The original of this article can be found at http://www.projinf.org/pub/24/protease.html