The unique nature of the replication cycle of the retroviruses, including HIV, offera number of possible targets for chemotherapeutic agents. These are RNA viruses which have the capacity to make DNA copies through their characteristic enzyme, reverse transcriptase, encoded in the pole region of the viral genoma. Reverse transcription is an attractive target for therapeutic intervention as this event is uniquelly associated with retroviruses. Dideoxynucleoside analogues can compete with endogenous nucleosides that are the natural substrate for reverse transcriptase or may be incorporated intro the growing chain of proviral DNA and terminate elongation. Reverse transcriptase inhibition is the principal mechanism of action of zidovudine (AZT) and related nucleosides, dideoxyinosine (ddl) and dideoxycitidine (ddC), which all attach to reverse transcriptase to the same site. This review will discuss current approaches to the antiretroviral therapy in AIDS patients. Several well controlled clinical trials have established both the efficacy and toxicity of AZT in patients with AIDS and severe ARC and it was shown that this drug decreased the incidence and severity of opportunistic infections, with the highly significant reduction in early mortality. The efficacy of newer reverse transcriptase-inhibiting nucleoside derivatives will be discussed too, as well as the issue of combination therapies.
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