
December 2002 Cover
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Doctors can get a handle on how well an HIV-infected person is responding to antiretroviral drugs as well as whether or not they are actually taking their medicine by testing a
sample of the patient's hair, researchers report.
Current methods used to monitor how well the drugs are working are "inefficient and inaccurate," the researchers note. They looked at 89 HIV-infected patients who were
taking HAART that included indinavir. Levels of the drug were measured in the patients' hair and blood. A low level of the drug could be a sign that patients were not taking their
medicine consistently or that the drug was not being absorbed completely.
The authors found that 65 patients had high levels of indinavir in their hair and those patients tended also to have low levels of virus in their blood compared with the 24
patients deemed non-responders. Those with the highest concentration of the drug in their hair were also less likely to have drug-resistant strains of HIV than non-responders. The new
test represents an improvement over testing blood samples because blood levels only reflect the medication doses most recently taken by the patient.
Editor's Note: from Reuters Health
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