British HIV Association guidelines for the treatment of HIV-1-infected adults with antiretroviral therapy 2008
journal contribution
posted on 2023-06-08, 15:20authored byB G Gazzard, Jane Anderson, Abdel Babiker, Marta Boffito, Gary Brook, Gary Brough, Duncan Churchill, Ben Cromarty, Satyajit Das, Martin Fisher, Andrew Freedman, Anna Maria Geretti, Margaret Johnson, Saye Khoo, Clifford Leen, Devaki Nair, Barry Peters, Andrew Phillips, Deenan Pillay, Anton Pozniak, John Walsh, Ed Wilkins, Ian Williams, Matthew Williams, Mike Youle
The 2008 BHIVA Guidelines have been updated to incorporate all the new relevant information (including presentations at the 15th Conference on Retroviruses and Opportunistic Infections 2008) since the last iteration. The guidelines follow the methodology outlined below and all the peer-reviewed publications and important, potentially treatment-changing abstracts from the last 2 years have been reviewed. The translation of data into clinical practice is often difficult even with the best possible evidence (i.e. two randomized controlled trials) because of trial design, inclusion criteria and precise surrogate marker endpoints (see Appendix). The recommendations based upon expert opinion have the least good evidence but perhaps provide an important reason for writing the guidelines to produce a consensual opinion about current practice. It must, however, be appreciated that such opinion is often wrong and should not stifle research to challenge it. Similarly, although the Writing Group seeks to provide guidelines to optimize treatment, such care needs to be individualized and we have not constructed a document that we would wish to see used as a ‘standard’ for litigation.