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lamivudinebased

Lamivudinebased refers to treatment regimens that use lamivudine (3TC) as a central antiviral component. Lamivudine is a nucleoside analogue reverse transcriptase inhibitor (NRTI) with activity against both human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) and hepatitis B virus (HBV). In clinical practice, lamivudine is combined with other antiretrovirals to form multi-drug regimens and is widely included in fixed-dose combinations.

In HIV-1 therapy, lamivudine is typically used as part of a two- or three-drug nucleoside backbone alongside

In HBV infection, lamivudine can suppress viral replication but the virus commonly develops resistance through YMDD

Safety and tolerability are generally favorable, with common adverse effects including gastrointestinal symptoms and headache. Lamivudine

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other
antiretrovirals.
It
is
commonly
dosed
as
300
mg
once
daily
or
150
mg
twice
daily,
depending
on
the
regimen
and
coadministered
agents.
Lamivudine-containing
regimens
are
found
in
many
standard
first-line
and
maintenance
strategies,
often
in
fixed-dose
combinations
with
another
NRTI
and
an
integrase
inhibitor
or
non-nucleoside
reverse
transcriptase
inhibitor.
The
goal
of
lamivudine-based
regimens
is
sustained
viral
suppression
with
a
tolerable
safety
profile.
mutations
with
long-term
use,
limiting
its
durability
as
monotherapy.
Consequently,
lamivudine-based
approaches
for
HBV
are
typically
used
in
combination
with
other
antiviral
agents
such
as
tenofovir
to
reduce
resistance
risk,
especially
in
co-infected
individuals
or
specific
clinical
settings.
is
often
well
tolerated,
but
resistance
and
cross‑resistance
with
related
NRTIs
can
influence
the
long-term
effectiveness
of
lamivudine-based
therapies.