Abstract

Importance of the field: Patients infected with HIV are at high risk for dyslipidemia, insulin resistance and cardiovascular disease. Therapies to reverse these risks are complex, sometimes controversial, and not uniformly effective.Areas covered in this review: Pathophysiology of the lipid abnormalities in HIV is discussed, including the causes of alterations in triglycerides, low-density lipoprotein cholesterol, high-density lipoprotein cholesterol and insulin resistance. We discuss the therapy of dyslipidemia in HIV using a combination of available clinical evidence and expert opinion based on extensive clinical experience, with discussions of lifestyle intervention and diet, conventional pharmacotherapy with lipid-lowering medications including statins, fibrates, niacin and thiazolidinediones for dyslipidemia, and newer therapeutic approaches including omega fatty acids, acipimox, growth hormone and leptin.What the reader will gain: A detailed understanding of the pathophysiology and rational or evidence-based approach to therapy of lipid abnormalities in patients infected with HIV.Take home message: Treatment of dyslipidemia in patients with HIV is challenging and complicated by the risk of drug interactions. Appropriate therapy requires a sound understanding of pathophysiology and the principles of pharmacological and nonpharmacological therapeutic interventions. An evidence-based approach that combines lifestyle changes and drugs that are both safe and effective, singly and in combination, is described.

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