Antiretrovirals (HIV)
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| Drug monograph · NCLEX study reference | |
| Therapeutic class | Antiretroviral |
|---|---|
| Pharmacologic class | NRTIs, integrase inhibitors, NNRTIs, protease inhibitors |
| Onset / peak / duration | Chronic daily therapy; combination single-tablet regimens common (such as Biktarvy). |
| Half-life / level | Varies; viral load and CD4 guide therapy. |
| Routes | PO (oral) |
| High-alert (ISMP) | No |
| Black box warning | Yes (see Safety) |
| Antidote / reversal | Supportive care. |
| Pregnancy / lactation | Managed by HIV specialists; therapy continued to prevent transmission. |
Nursing pharmacology study reference (NCLEX-style monograph). Numeric values are standard teaching ranges for study and must be verified against current manufacturer labeling before clinical use. This is educational content, not prescribing guidance.
Antiretrovirals (HIV) — Antiretroviral; NRTIs, integrase inhibitors, NNRTIs, protease inhibitors.
Identification
- Therapeutic class: Antiretroviral.
- Pharmacologic class: NRTIs, integrase inhibitors, NNRTIs, protease inhibitors.
Pharmacology
- Mechanism of action: Inhibit different steps of HIV replication; combined as antiretroviral therapy to suppress viral load.
- Onset / peak / duration: Chronic daily therapy; combination single-tablet regimens common (such as Biktarvy).
- Half-life / therapeutic level: Varies; viral load and CD4 guide therapy.
Clinical use
- Indications: HIV treatment; emtricitabine/tenofovir also for pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP).
- Usual dose, route, frequency: PO once daily for most modern regimens.
- Maximum dose / adjustments: Tenofovir adjusted by renal function; many interactions.
Safety
- Contraindications: Drug-specific (efavirenz with certain psychiatric risk; protease inhibitors with many CYP3A4 drugs).
- Black box warning: Some NRTIs carry class warnings for lactic acidosis and severe hepatomegaly with steatosis; agents active against hepatitis B (tenofovir, emtricitabine) carry warnings for severe hepatitis B flare if stopped; abacavir (not in this prototype set) carries a hypersensitivity boxed warning tied to HLA-B*5701.
- Interactions: Protease inhibitors and efavirenz have extensive CYP interactions; tenofovir with nephrotoxic drugs.
- Pregnancy / lactation: Managed by HIV specialists; therapy continued to prevent transmission.
- High-alert: No.
Adverse effects
- Common side effects: Nausea, diarrhea, headache; efavirenz causes vivid dreams and dizziness.
- Serious effects to report: Renal impairment and bone loss (tenofovir), efavirenz neuropsychiatric effects, immune reconstitution syndrome, hepatitis flare on discontinuation.
- Antidote / reversal: Supportive care.
Nursing process
- Assessment before administration: Renal and hepatic function, viral load and CD4, hepatitis B status, full drug list.
- Interventions during therapy: Stress strict adherence to prevent resistance; review interactions; do not stop abruptly if hepatitis B positive.
- Monitor: Viral load, CD4, renal and hepatic function, adherence.
- Evaluation / expected outcome: Suppressed viral load and preserved immune function.
Patient teaching
- Patient teaching: Take every dose on time; never run out or stop suddenly; report mood changes (efavirenz).
- Notify provider if: Decreased urination, mood changes, new infections, jaundice.
- Administration tips: Once-daily combination tablets; adherence is critical.