Through bNAb immunotherapy, people living with HIV could potentially receive an injection of antibodies or another immunological intervention that would suppress the virus. The injection would remove HIV from a person’s blood and enable control of the virus without a daily ART regimen. “For the near future, it is unlikely that we will be able to fully eradicate HIV once a person has been infected. But a functional cure is a reasonable intermediate goal,” Tebas said.
A functional HIV cure means that while the virus would still exist in a person’s body in extremely small amounts, virus replication would be durably suppressed, disease progression drastically slowed, and symptoms of infection stopped – all without the need for daily medications. “The goal of immunotherapy is to eliminate the need to take a pill every single day while simultaneously chipping away at the latent reservoir of virus-infected cells. However, we are still years away from that goal. And even if a person is able to be functionally cured of HIV, long-term follow-up will be essential to ensure that the virus doesn’t return to high levels,” Tebas said. The bNAb tested in this trial did not provide long-lasting virus control in participants. Investigators tested historical blood samples from trial participants that were stored at both Penn and UAB’s Centers for AIDS Research (CFAR) in order to determine if there was pre-existing resistance to bNAb immunotherapy and reveal its limitations as a potential cure. They found that the trial participants with the shortest times of HIV suppression harbored viruses that were resistant to the bNAb. “We found that many trial participants had HIV that was resistant to the bNAb immunotherapy long before they entered the trial. This pre-existing resistance to HIV-targeting bNAbs was a barrier to effective immunotherapy here, and will continue to present challenges to HIV bNAb therapies moving forward,” said Katharine Bar, MD, first author of the study and director of Viral and Molecular Core of the Penn Center for AIDS Research (CFAR). Bar notes that this study was a collaborative effort between several institutions. “The close collaboration between the Penn and UAB CFARs with the AIDS Clinical Trials Group (ACTG) enabled us to characterize the pre-existing resistance and identify it as a key barrier to developing bNAb immunotherapy as an HIV cure. Continued collaboration between CFARs and the ACTG will be instrumental as we continue to move this research forward.” Future trials that are now in development will test whether combinations of more potent bNAbs can provide durable virus suppression and potentially reduce the size of the persistent reservoir. The research team for the Penn/UAB study also included James A. Hoxie and Mark Bardsley of Penn’s Perelman School of Medicine; Nancy Tustin of the Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia; and Edgar T. Overton of the University of Alabama at Birmingham. Findings from both studies, which were funded by the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (NIAID), part of NIH (U01AI068636), appear in the Nov. 24 print issue of the New England Journal of Medicine.
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