Moving forward: a treatment overview from the 12th World AIDS Conference.

1998 
: The 12th World AIDS Conference in Geneva brought together AIDS researchers, medical care providers, advocates, and people living with HIV to discuss implications related to providing global access to care. New drugs have decreased deaths and opportunistic infections in developed countries, but developing countries are becoming overwhelmed by the number of new patients. The World Health Organization estimates that the majority of the 30.6 million people infected with HIV/AIDS worldwide will die within a decade unless a cure is found or treatments are made accessible to them. Researchers are no longer optimistic about the feasibility of viral eradication, and instead are looking for strategies to overcome the virus that continues to live in latent reservoirs in the body. Descriptions are given of several new drugs currently being studied, including abacavir, amprenavir, efavirenz, ABT 378, and Hydroxyurea. Progress is also highlighted about dosing regimens, antiretroviral resistance, and reconstitution of the immune system.
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