90% ну тоесть порешность какая то неопределимая при раннем начале приема лекарств. и от 60% в запущенных случаях в руанде.
Ну раз тебе этого мало
https://www.aidsmap.com/news/mar-202...rs-good-health
The researchers deepened the analysis to consider people’s health as they got older. They checked the Kaiser Permanente database for diagnoses, test results and prescriptions indicating chronic liver disease (including hepatitis B or C), chronic kidney disease, chronic lung disease, cardiovascular disease, diabetes or cancer.
They found that people with HIV live substantially fewer healthy years than people without HIV. In the period 2014 to 2016, the HIV-positive 21 year old was predicted to be living without any of the mentioned health problems to the age of 36, whereas their HIV-negative peer would do so to the age of 52.
Strikingly, this 16-year gap is the same as was found at the beginning of the study, in 2000 t0 2003.
The onset of liver disease occurred 24 years earlier for people with HIV, kidney disease 17 years earlier and lung disease 16 years earlier. Slightly more encouragingly, the gap did narrow for diabetes, cancer and cardiovascular disease (an eight- or nine-year gap for each).
Taking HIV treatment promptly, before significant damage to the immune system, did not seem to make much difference. Even if the 21 year old with HIV started treatment with a CD4 count above 500, the onset of co-morbidities was predicted for the age of 34 – 16 years before a person without HIV. An improvement was seen for cancer and cardiovascular disease, but not the other co-morbidities.