ABSTRACT:Abstract(#br)The introduction of combination of antiretroviral therapy and advancement in care of HIV have dramatically changed the natural history of patients living with HIV. Today, HIV+ patients have a life expectancy not significantly different from HIV uninfected people. However, concerns remain about all the comorbidities associated with aging and the effects of chronic therapies in such high-risk patients. HIV+ subjects exhibited accelerated atherosclerosis and have a 1.5- to 2-fold increased risk of having coronary artery disease (CAD), usually presenting early and aggressively with acute coronary events. Furthermore, HIV+ patients with CAD often complain recurrent acute coronary events, and they are plagued by major adverse cardiac outcomes.(#br)This review will focus on the current understanding of the CAD phenotype in HIV+ patients highlighting the topic of acute coronary event recurrence and underscoring the role of percutaneous management strategies in the light of information derived from invasive coronary imaging.