Currently, there is no magic cure for AIDS on the market. Drugs related to AIDS are divided into several types, the most common of which is the Reverse Transcriptase Inhibitor.
Reverse Transcriptase Inhibitors are gene-level drugs that can inhibit the gene synthesis of the AIDS virus, but they only slow down the rate of synthesis and cannot play a direct role in it.
The next most common is a Protease Inhibitor, which, as the name suggests, inhibits the synthesis of protease, thus suppressing the replication of the AIDS virus by interfering with protein synthesis.
These two drugs are the most common, but all they do is 'delay' the progress of the disease.
Importantly, the probability of side effects is very high from long-term use of these two types of drugs because both Reverse Transcriptase Inhibitors and Protease Inhibitors target all genes and proteins in the body, not exclusively the AIDS virus.
The 2CV-Bing Hydrogen Molecule is therefor not used anymore.