Good News About a Bad Disease: HIV No Longer Shortens Lifespans

© Sputnik / Sergei Veniavskiy / Go to the mediabankВ вирусологической лаборатории Центра по профилактике и борьбе со СПИДом и инфекционными заболеваниями
В вирусологической лаборатории Центра по профилактике и борьбе со СПИДом и инфекционными заболеваниями - Sputnik International
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HIV, once one of the most feared afflictions in the world, has become significantly less dangerous, thanks to medical breakthroughs: People who start treatment today are likely to live a full, long life, a new study confirms.

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The publication by a group of scientists from the University of Bristol who reviewed 18 studies involving 88,500 patients in Europe and North America, highlights that today's treatment for HIV is significantly more effective than the remedies of the past.

A healthy American is expected to live 78.8 years, reads the study, published in the Lancet. A twenty-year-old with HIV who begins treatment today, is likely to live nearly that full term — 78 years, the study claims.

"Between 1996-99 and 2008-10, life expectancy in people living with HIV starting [antiretroviral therapy] increased by around 10 years for both sexes, in Europe and North America," the team reported.

People who started treatment between 2008 and 2010, and survived their first year, are expected to live up to 73 years for men and 76 for women — up to 78 years for those with higher-than-average immune cell counts. By comparison, 20-year-old men and women who started their treatment back in 1996 to 2007 were expected to live about 63 and 67 years, respectively.

Today's drugs are better at keeping the virus from replicating and developing resistance, and they are also are less toxic to the human body, with fewer side effects. It is also important to note that patients are now more likely to take their prescriptions effectively and without missed doses, as today's treatments often involve only one daily pill, the study reported.

"We have better drugs…. People are adhering better because they know these drugs really work," said Dr. Anthony Fauci, director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases. "I think the combination of all of those [factors] easily explains in a logical way the results of that study."

"We're just getting better at what we do," he added, according to STAT.

However, Fauci believes the damage the virus does can't be completely erased by early treatment.

"I think we're going to get really close to a normal life expectancy," he said. "I would be surprised if it would be exactly the same. But I think it will be close enough to be dramatic."

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