People living with HIV on modern antiretroviral therapy now experience obesity rates matching the general population, creating a new clinical challenge as this population ages. The research reveals that obesity in HIV patients directly drives metabolic dysfunction beyond what's typically seen, suggesting HIV-specific pathways amplify obesity's harmful effects. This represents a dramatic shift from the historical wasting syndrome associated with untreated HIV. The convergence of HIV and obesity creates a perfect storm for cardiovascular disease, diabetes, and other age-related conditions in a population already facing immune system challenges. While lifestyle interventions remain important, the review emphasizes that surgical and pharmacological weight loss treatments show superior efficacy in reducing obesity-related complications. This finding challenges the traditional focus on nutritional support in HIV care, suggesting aggressive weight management may now be as critical as viral suppression. The research highlights a paradigm shift in HIV medicine from managing undernutrition to confronting obesity—a testament to treatment success but also an emerging threat requiring specialized clinical approaches for this vulnerable aging population.
HIV Patients Face Obesity Crisis Despite Modern Antiretroviral Therapy
📄 Based on research published in Current HIV/AIDS reports
Read the original paper →For informational, non-clinical use. Synthesized analysis of published research — may contain errors. Not medical advice. Consult original sources and your physician.