#HIVCure
3/ in "shock-and-kill" approaches, as we found (link to studies below). Indeed, the authors don't seem to generate evidence for detectable reduction of the reservoir size, and (temporal) virus control seems to be achieved predominantly by T-cell responses. #HIVCure is not around the corner!
December 23, 2025 at 7:10 PM
1/ I agree that (even functional) #HIVCure will probably need a multi-component and staged strategy, and is not close. This multi-pronged approach shows, 18 months post ATI, a delay of viral rebound in 6/9 participants, and remission in 1/9 participants (though the latter seems to display a
December 23, 2025 at 7:10 PM
Last month, my team had the great pleasure of hosting a fantastic guest PhD student, Bridget Fisher, from Sharon Lewin's lab at The Peter Doherty Institute for Infection and Immunity, for our collaborative work on #HIVCure. Looking fwd to continuing this exciting joint study. Very well done Bridget!
December 23, 2025 at 5:25 PM
🌍✨ Meet Prof. Sharon Lewin ✨🌍
Join the ISAC–ISID World AIDS Day Webinar
📅 Dec 17 2025
🎤 “Advances in HIV Cure Research”
Global HIV leader, past IAS President, Director Doherty Institute
🔗 Register tinyurl.com/4tmmdrz6
#WorldAIDSDay #HIVCure #GlobalHealth

@isid.org @souhakanj.bsky.social
December 12, 2025 at 11:47 AM
Happening in 1 hour! The Quest For An HIV Cure — Will It Be Discovered in Africa?
Join the conversation where leading #HIVcure researchers & @iasociety.bsky.social Vaccine&Cure Fellow explore current research & its potential. Hosted by The Choice Agenda. Register buff.ly/BpZ9Mpg
Welcome! You are invited to join a meeting: The Quest For An HIV Cure - Will It Be Discovered in Africa?. After registering, you will receive a confirmation email about joining the meeting.
A definitive cure for HIV remains elusive. So far, only 7 people have been reportedly cured, and all these have been in the global North. Africa remains the continent with the highest burden of HIV,…
buff.ly
December 11, 2025 at 12:01 PM
Absolutely privileged to have met Michel Sidibé, AU Envoy for African Medicines Agency, former @unaids.org Director & Mali Health Minister. Our chat spanned topics ranging from #HIVcure development to implementation. Should a cure be discovered, do we have systems to ensure equitable access?
December 10, 2025 at 5:12 PM
Long-Term HIV Control: A Combination Therapy Trial Shows Promise
A new study on a combination of experimental immunotherapies may help people control HIV without long-term antiretroviral treatment — a promising step toward a future cure.
#HIV #HIVtreatment #HIVcure
www.eatg.org/hiv-news/lon...
Long-term HIV control: Could this combination therapy be the key?
A study is the first to use a combination of immunotherapies in humans. The results show promise for sustained control of the virus.
www.eatg.org
December 9, 2025 at 1:18 AM
Case of functional cure reported in an #EliteController after 22 years without #HIVtreatment:

i-base.info/htb/52761

asiersc.bsky.social estimates there are more than 1000 reported cases of natural #HIV suppression.

#HIVsky #ResearchSky #HIVcure #HIVremission @thelancet.com @lancetgh.bsky.social
December 8, 2025 at 3:48 PM
Thurs. Dec. 11th, 8 am ET Webinar!
The Quest For An HIV Cure — Will It Be Discovered in Africa?
Join the conversation where leading #HIVcure researchers & @iasociety.bsky.social HIV Vaccine&Cure Fellow explore current research & its potential. Hosted by The Choice Agenda. Register buff.ly/BpZ9Mpg
Welcome! You are invited to join a meeting: The Quest For An HIV Cure - Will It Be Discovered in Africa?. After registering, you will receive a confirmation email about joining the meeting.
A definitive cure for HIV remains elusive. So far, only 7 people have been reportedly cured, and all these have been in the global North. Africa remains the continent with the highest burden of HIV,…
buff.ly
December 8, 2025 at 1:35 PM
Thurs. Dec. 11th, 8 am ET Webinar!
The Quest For An HIV Cure — Will It Be Discovered in Africa?
Join the conversation where leading #HIVcure researchers & @iasociety.bsky.social HIV Vaccine&Cure Fellow explore current research & its potential. Hosted by The Choice Agenda. Register buff.ly/BpZ9Mpg
Welcome! You are invited to join a meeting: The Quest For An HIV Cure - Will It Be Discovered in Africa?. After registering, you will receive a confirmation email about joining the meeting.
A definitive cure for HIV remains elusive. So far, only 7 people have been reportedly cured, and all these have been in the global North. Africa remains the continent with the highest burden of HIV, and...
buff.ly
December 5, 2025 at 1:35 PM
On this #WorldAIDSday @cgaebler.bsky.social, Olaf Penack & teams at #CharitéBerlin report the #SecondBerlinPatient cured of #HIV after heterozygous CCR5Δ32 HSCT. The study opens exciting perspectives for immune-based #HIVCure strategies for longterm ART-free viral control and ultimately cure.
Sustained HIV-1 remission after heterozygous CCR5Δ32 stem cell transplantation - Nature
Nature - Sustained HIV-1 remission after heterozygous CCR5Δ32 stem cell transplantation
www.nature.com
December 1, 2025 at 9:48 PM
👨 🦠 ➡️ 🏥 💉 🧬 ❓🤯 ✨🥳 ❌🦠 💪👨 #HIVCure #MedicalBreakthrough
A man has unexpectedly been cured of HIV after receiving a transplant of non-HIV resistant stem cells
www.newscientist.com
December 1, 2025 at 6:00 PM
A man has been unexpectedly cured of HIV following a standard stem cell transplant, a groundbreaking development that sparks immense hope as it didn't rely on HIV-resistant cells! ✨ #HIVCure #MedicalBreakthrough #HopeForHIV
A man has unexpectedly been cured of HIV after receiving a transplant of non-HIV-resistant stem cells
www.newscientist.com
December 1, 2025 at 5:00 PM
HIV cure breakthrough! Antibody therapies show promise in clinical trials. #HIVCure #AntibodyTherapy #ClinicalTrials #HIVResearch #Medicine
Video
Is a functional HIV cure finally within reach? Discover how groundbreaking antibody therapies could revolutionize treatment and offer a life free from daily medication. Learn about the latest clinical trials and the promise of a future without HIV's burden. #HIVCure #MedicalBreakthrough #AntibodyTherapy #ClinicalTrials #HealthInnovation Published 2025-11-29 Tools used for generation Text Gemini Narator Azure TTS Clips Pexel Rendering Remotion
www.youtube.com
November 29, 2025 at 8:41 PM
This patient becomes second person cure after receiving stem cells that are not fully resistant to the virus. The donor carried only one copy of the mutated CCR5 gene, which means their cells did express CCR5, but at lower levels. #HIV #HIVcure
Seventh Patient ‘Cured’ of HIV: Why Scientists are Excited
A man in Germany is HIV-free after receiving stem cells that are not resistant to the virus. A 60-year-old man in Germany has become at least the seventh person with HIV to be announced free of the virus after receiving a stem-cell transplant But the man, who has been virus-free for close to six years, is only the second person to receive stem cells that are not resistant to the virus. “I am quite surprised that it worked,” says Ravindra Gupta, a microbiologist at the University of Cambridge, UK, who led a team that treated one of the other people who is now free of HIV. “It’s a big deal.” The first person found to be HIV-free after a bone-marrow transplant to treat blood cancer was Timothy Ray Brown, who is known as the Berlin patient. Brown and a handful of others received special donor stem cells. These carried a mutation in the gene that encodes a receptor called CCR5, which is used by most HIV virus strains to enter immune cells. To many scientists, these cases suggested that CCR5 was the best target for an HIV cure.   The latest case — presented at the 25th International AIDS Conference in Munich, Germany, this week — turns that on its head. The patient, referred to as the next Berlin patient, received stem cells from a donor who only had one copy of the mutated gene, which means their cells do express CCR5, but at lower levels than usual. The case sends a clear message that finding a cure for HIV is “not all about CCR5”, says infectious-disease physician Sharon Lewin, who heads The Peter Doherty Institute for Infection and Immunity in Melbourne, Australia. Ultimately, the findings widen the donor pool for stem-cell transplants, a risky procedure offered to people with leukaemia but unlikely to be rolled out for most individuals with HIV. Roughly 1% of people of European descent carry mutations in both copies of the CCR5 gene, but some 10% of people with such ancestry have one mutated copy. The case “broadens the horizon of what might be possible” for treating HIV, says Sara Weibel, a physician-scientist who studies HIV at the University of California, San Diego. Some 40 million people are living with HIV globally. Six years HIV-free The next Berlin patient was diagnosed with HIV in 2009. He developed a type of blood and bone-marrow cancer known as acute myeloid leukaemia in 2015. His doctors could not find a matching stem-cell donor who had mutations in both copies of the CCR5 gene. But they found a female donor who had one mutated copy, similar to the patient. The next Berlin patient received the stem-cell transplant in 2015. “The cancer treatment went very well,” says Christian Gaebler, a physician-scientist and immunologist at the Charité — Berlin University Medicine, who presented the work. Within a month, the patient’s bone-marrow stem cells had been replaced with the donor’s. The patient stopped taking antiretroviral drugs, which suppress HIV, in 2018. And now, almost six years later, researchers can’t find evidence of HIV replicating in the patient. Shrunken reservoir Previous attempts to transplant stem cells from donors with regular CCR5 genes have seen the virus reappear weeks to months after the people with HIV stopped taking antiretroviral therapy, in all but one person. In 2023, Asier Sáez-Cirión, an HIV researcher at the Pasteur Institute in Paris, presented data on an individual called the Geneva patient, who had been without antiretroviral therapy for 18 months. Sáez-Cirión says the person remains free of the virus, about 32 months later. Researchers are now trying to work out why these two transplants succeeded when others have failed. They propose several mechanisms. First, antiretroviral treatment causes the amount of virus in the body to drop considerably. And chemotherapy before the stem-cell transplant kills many of the host’s immune cells, which is where residual HIV lurks. Transplanted donor cells might then mark leftover host cells as foreign and destroy them, together with any virus residing in them. The rapid and complete replacement of the host’s bone-marrow stem cells with those of the donor’s might also contribute to the swift eradication. “If you can shrink the reservoir enough, you can cure people,” says Lewin. The fact that both the next Berlin patient and his stem cell donor had one CCR5 gene copy with a mutation could have created an extra barrier to the virus entering cells, says Gaebler. The case also has implications for therapies currently in early-stage clinical trials, in which the CCR5 receptor is sliced out of a person’s own cells using CRISPR–Cas9 and other gene-editing techniques, says Lewin. Even if these therapies don’t get to every single cell, they could still have an impact, she says.
sco.lt
November 28, 2025 at 4:37 PM
AVAC’s Jessica Salzwedel shares the latest on #HIVcure and how lessons from progress in pediatric cure research can inform the path forward in conversation with Doreen Moraa, @gnpplus.bsky.social and community advocates.
November 26, 2025 at 1:02 PM
There’s still time to join this webinar with @gnpplus.bsky.social on The Science of #HIVCure: What Communities Need to Know.

Register: us02web.zoom.us/webinar/regi...
November 26, 2025 at 12:47 PM
In Conversation | Latest HIV Cure Science

In this latest Poslink+ podcast episode from @livingpositive.bsky.social PWVs Kirsty Machon and Heather Ellis discuss the latest in HIV cure science and emerging long acting ARVs.
#HIV #HIVcure @napwha.bsky.social

lpv.org.au/poslink-medi...
Listen - Living Positive Victoria
Poslink+ Listen is our podcast by and about people living with HIV. In it, you will hear from people in our diverse and inspiring community, including personal stories, medical and...
lpv.org.au
October 31, 2025 at 4:52 AM
HIV and the Gut: Why It Matters for a Cure

When people think about HIV, they often think of it in the blood — but one of the main places HIV hides is actually in the gut.
#HIV #HIVcure @napwha.bsky.social @livingpositive.bsky.social
www.eatg.org/hiv-news/hiv...
HIV and the gut: Why it matters for a cure
The gut represents one of the biggest challenges to curing HIV. It contains most of the body’s immune cells, making it a complicated hiding place for the virus.
www.eatg.org
October 30, 2025 at 12:09 AM
New antibody could step toward a functional cure for HIV
German researchers have discovered a powerful new antibody that neutralized 98% of HIV variants in the lab.
#HIV #HIVcure #HIVtreatment @napwha.bsky.social @livingpositive.bsky.social @jillianlau.bsky.social
www.dw.com/en/germany-n...
German researchers find highly effective HIV antibody – DW – 10/15/2025
Ahead of the 2025 European AIDS Conference, researchers discovered a new antibody against HIV. They say it can prevent infections and neutralize the virus in the lab. But can it help boost the immune ...
www.dw.com
October 23, 2025 at 12:17 AM
New research shows stress may “wake up” hidden HIV

A Melbourne study found acute psychological stress can increase HIV activity in cells, even when on ARVs.
Highlights importance of stress management in people with HIV.
#HIV #HIVTreatment #HIVCure #HIVwomen

www.sciencedirect.com/science/arti...
The impact of acute stress on the HIV reservoir: a prospective interventional trial
The persistence of latently infected CD4+ T cells is the major barrier to cure of people with HIV (PWH) on antiretroviral therapy (ART). While most la…
www.sciencedirect.com
October 22, 2025 at 1:11 AM
So, formation of the latent HIV reservoir, the main barrier to #HIVcure, isn't a random process, but a deliberate survival strategy by HIV. This work has major implications for #EndHIV efforts by uncovering new therapeutic targets to address critical gaps in existing therapies.
October 21, 2025 at 7:40 PM