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A Possible Sterilizing Cure of HIV-1 Infection Without Stem Cell Transplantation

Authors :
Sharon R Lewin
Yanina Alexandra Ghiglione
María Laura Polo
Xiao-Dong Lian
Ce Gao
Janet M. Siliciano
Xu G. Yu
Alejandra Vellicce
Natalia Laufer
Robert F. Siliciano
Ajantha Rhodes
Mary Carrington
Gabriela Turk
Joseph Varriale
Yelizaveta Rassadkina
Elizabeth M Parsons
Maureen Martin
Alejandro Czernikier
Kyra Seiger
Mathias Lichterfeld
Bruce D. Walker
Weiwei Sun
Jun Lai
Yuko Yuki
Source :
Ann Intern Med
Publication Year :
2022
Publisher :
American College of Physicians, 2022.

Abstract

Background A sterilizing cure of HIV-1 infection has been reported in 2 persons living with HIV-1 who underwent allogeneic hematopoietic stem cell transplantations from donors who were homozygous for the CCR5Δ32 gene polymorphism. However, this has been considered elusive during natural infection. Objective To evaluate persistent HIV-1 reservoir cells in an elite controller with undetectable HIV-1 viremia for more than 8 years in the absence of antiretroviral therapy. Design Detailed investigation of virologic and immunologic characteristics. Setting Tertiary care centers in Buenos Aires, Argentina, and Boston, Massachusetts. Patient A patient with HIV-1 infection and durable drug-free suppression of HIV-1 replication. Measurements Analysis of genome-intact and replication-competent HIV-1 using near-full-length individual proviral sequencing and viral outgrowth assays, respectively; analysis of HIV-1 plasma RNA by ultrasensitive HIV-1 viral load testing. Results No genome-intact HIV-1 proviruses were detected in analysis of a total of 1.188 billion peripheral blood mononuclear cells and 503 million mononuclear cells from placental tissues. Seven defective proviruses, some of them derived from clonally expanded cells, were detected. A viral outgrowth assay failed to retrieve replication-competent HIV-1 from 150 million resting CD4+ T cells. No HIV-1 RNA was detected in 4.5 mL of plasma. Limitations Absence of evidence for intact HIV-1 proviruses in large numbers of cells is not evidence of absence of intact HIV-1 proviruses. A sterilizing cure of HIV-1 can never be empirically proved. Conclusion Genome-intact and replication-competent HIV-1 were not detected in an elite controller despite analysis of massive numbers of cells from blood and tissues, suggesting that this patient may have naturally achieved a sterilizing cure of HIV-1 infection. These observations raise the possibility that a sterilizing cure may be an extremely rare but possible outcome of HIV-1 infection. Primary funding source National Institutes of Health and Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation.

Details

ISSN :
15393704 and 00034819
Volume :
175
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Annals of Internal Medicine
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....3001c231985e5522dd8d86e835ad8254