Cytomegalovirus viremia and advanced HIV disease: is there an argument for anti-CMV treatment?
Caleb P SkipperMark R SchleissPublished in: Expert review of anti-infective therapy (2023)
Evidence suggests that active CMV replication, manifest as CMV viremia (DNAemia), may play a key role in driving progression of HIV-associated opportunistic infections. We propose that control of CMV replication, independent of the known benefit of HAART therapy on reducing CMV end-organ disease, could reduce the risk of disease and mortality attributable to opportunistic infections such as cryptococcosis and tuberculosis. This could be achieved by the targeted use of CMV antivirals. The advent of newer (and safer) orally bioavailable CMV antivirals has renewed interest in, and opportunities for, randomized controlled trials to evaluate CMV viremia as a modifiable risk factor in high-risk persons with HIV disease.
Keyphrases
- antiretroviral therapy
- hiv infected
- hiv positive
- hiv aids
- human immunodeficiency virus
- hiv testing
- hepatitis c virus
- randomized controlled trial
- risk factors
- stem cells
- coronary artery disease
- men who have sex with men
- clinical trial
- cardiovascular events
- cancer therapy
- drug delivery
- south africa
- hiv infected patients
- diffuse large b cell lymphoma
- combination therapy
- bone marrow
- pulmonary tuberculosis
- smoking cessation