INTEC   05402
INSTITUTO DE DESARROLLO TECNOLOGICO PARA LA INDUSTRIA QUIMICA
Unidad Ejecutora - UE
artículos
Título:
Taking Side-Effects into Account for HIV Medication
Autor/es:
VICENTE COSTANZA; PABLO S. RIVADENEIRA; FEDERICO BIAFORE; CARLOS D'ATTELLIS
Revista:
IEEE TRANSACTIONS ON BIO-MEDICAL ENGINEERING
Editorial:
IEEE-INST ELECTRICAL ELECTRONICS ENGINEERS INC
Referencias:
Año: 2010 p. 2079 - 2088
ISSN:
0018-9294
Resumen:
A control-theoretic approach to the problem of designing `low-side-effects´ therapies for HIV patients based on highly active drugs is substantiated here. The evolution of side-effects during treatment is modeled by an extra differential equation coupled to the dynamics of virions, healthy T-cells, and infected ones.  The new equation reflects the dependence of collateral damages on the amount of each dose administered to the patient, and on the evolution of the viral load detected by periodical blood analysis.  The cost objective accounts for recommended bounds on healthy cells and virions, and also penalizes the appearance of collateral morbidities caused by the medication.  The optimization problem is solved by a hybrid Dynamic Programming scheme that adhere to discrete-time observation and control actions, but maintaining the continuous-time setup for predicting states and side-effects.  The resulting optimal strategies employ less drugs than those prescribed by previous optimization studies, but maintaining high doses at the beginning and the end of each period of six months.  If an inverse discount rate is applied to favor early actions, and under a mild penalization of the final viral load, then the optimal doses are found to be high at the beginning and decrease afterwards, causing an apparent stabilization of the main variables. But in that case, the final viral load turns higher than acceptable.