Why You Shouldn't Take a Vacation From HIV Treatment
Here's more bad news for HIV-positive gay men who are considering a short-term break (or "vacation" from their antiretroviral drug regimens: You're more likely to expose others to the virus and to suffer potentially dangerous blood clots yourself if you do, according to at least two studies.
An analysis of data from the large-scale Strategies for the Management of Antiretroviral Therapy study, which was stopped in 2006 when it showed that even structured treatment interruptions double the risks for serious illness or death, indicates that treatment breaks significantly boost HIV transmission risks, despite rates of risky behaviors remaining constant. Because HIV viral levels in both blood and sexual fluids rose in the absence of anti-HIV medications, the chances of infecting others through unprotected sex or needle sharing also increased, researchers reported in the Journal of Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndromes in 2008.
A second analysis of the SMART study data reported in the journal PLoS Medicine also showed that treatment breaks were linked with increases in three key blood proteins linked with inflammation and blood vessel damage, particularly potentially life-threatening blood clots, even after anti-HIV meds are resumed. The researchers say it's also possible for inflammation to increase risks for diabetes, heart disease, and certain cancers, although their study did not specifically address these ailments.
At one time it was thought that short breaks ranging from a few days to several months could offer people with HIV a much-needed respite from the taxing and toxic side effects of antiretrovirals as well as cut costs for people struggling to pay the hefty annual costs for treatment. Some AIDS experts even once posited that short drug-free periods could induce one's body to produce more HIV-fighting CD4 cells.
http://www.gay.net/just-diagnosed/2013/11/04/why-you-shouldnt-take-vacation-hiv-treatment