There is no fastest way to cure AIDS and there is no cure for AIDS. AIDS, also known as Acquired Immunodeficiency Syndrome or AIDS, is a systemic disease caused by infection with the Human Immunodeficiency Virus (HIV). After the human body is infected with HIV, the virus violates the immune system by destroying the body’s immune cells, which ultimately leads to defective cellular immunity in the human body, thus reducing the body’s ability to fight infections and to defend itself against cancer. At present, there is no effective drug to cure HIV infection, AIDS is an incurable disease, and the goal of treatment for AIDS patients is to inhibit viral replication as much as possible, so as to slow down the progression of the disease. The introduction of antiretroviral drugs in 1987 dramatically changed the treatment regimen, and the introduction of combination antiretroviral therapy (ART) in 1996 revolutionized the treatment regimen; there is no cure for HIV infection, but the natural course of the disease has been radically altered, and treatment before severe immunosuppression can be expected to be effective in HIV-infected patients without other serious comorbidities, and in patients with no other serious comorbidities. For HIV-infected patients without other serious comorbidities, treatment before severe immunosuppression is expected to bring life expectancy closer to that of the general population. After diagnosis, people living with HIV should receive treatment aggressively while maintaining a good state of mind. If they become unwell during treatment, they should seek prompt medical attention.