With more than 35 million people worldwide living with the virus and nearly 2 million new cases each year, the human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) remains a major global epidemic. Existing antiretroviral drugs do not cure HIV infection because of the virus's ability to become dormant, remaining present but silent in immune cells. Known as the latent reservoir, these infected cells - where HIV remains hidden despite antiretroviral therapy (ART) - can become active again at any time.
"The latent viral reservoir is the critical barrier for the development of a cure for HIV-1 infection," said Dan H. Barouch, MD, PhD, director of the Center for Virology and Vaccine Research at Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center (BIDMC). "One hypothesis is that activating these latent reservoir cells may render them more susceptible to destruction."
In a new study published in Nature today, Barouch and colleagues demonstrate that administering broadly neutralizing antibodies (bNAb) designed to target HIV in combination with agents that stimulate the innate immune system delayed viral rebound following discontinuation of ART in monkeys. The findings suggest that this two-pronged approach represents a potential strategy for targeting the viral reservoir.
Barouch and colleagues studied 44 rhesus monkeys infected with an HIV-like virus and treated with ART for two and a half years, starting one week after infection. After 96 weeks, the animals were divided into four groups. One group - the control group - received no additional investigational treatments. Additional groups were given only an immune stimulating agent or only the antibodies. A fourth group was given the immune stimulant in combination with the antibodies. All animals continued ART treatment until it was discontinued at week 130, at which point the scientists began monitoring the animals' blood for signs of the virus's return, known as viral rebound.
As expected, 100 percent of animals in the control group rebounded quickly and with high peak viral loads, as did nearly all of those given only the immune stimulant. But among those given the combination therapy, five of 11 monkeys did not rebound within six months. Moreover, those that did rebound showed much lower peak viral loads compared to the control animals. Animals given only the antibodies demonstrated a detectable but modest delay in rebound.
"The combination of the antibodies and the immune stimulant led to optimal killing of HIV-infected cells," said Barouch, who is also Professor of Medicine at Harvard Medical School. "Together, our data suggest a mechanism by which the combination therapy stimulated innate immunity and rendered infected cells more susceptible to elimination. This study provides an initial proof-of-concept showing a potential strategy to target the viral reservoir."
This study is the result of a collaboration among researchers at BIDMC, Harvard Medical School; the Ragon Institute of Massachusetts General Hospital, MIT and Harvard; University of Massachusetts; Bioqual; and Gilead Sciences.
Co-authors include co-lead authors Erica N. Borducchi, Jinyan Liu, Joseph P. Nkolola and Anthony M. Cadena, as well as Peter Abbink, Noe B. Mercado, Abishek Chandrashekar, David Jetton, Lauren Peter, Katherine McMahan, and Edward T. Moseley of the Center for Virology and Vaccine Research at Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center; Wen-Han Yu, Stephanie Fischinger, Thomas Broge and Galit Alter of the Ragon Institute of MGH, MIT, and Harvard; Romas Geleziunas, Elena Bekerman and Joseph Hesselgesser of Gilead Sciences; Wenjun Li of University of Massachusetts Medical School; and Mark G. Lewis of Bioqual.
This work was funded with support from the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation (OPP1107669), the American Foundation for AIDS Research (109219-58-RGRL), the National Institutes of Health (AI096040, AI124377, AI126603, AI129797, AI128751, OD024917), and the Ragon Institute of MGH, MIT, and Harvard.
Competing interests: Romas Geleziunas, Elena Bekerman and Joseph Hesselgesser are employees of Gilead Sciences. The other authors declare no competing interests.
Source: Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center
APIC Salutes 2025 Trailblazers in Infection Prevention and Control
June 18th 2025From a lifelong mentor to a rising star, the Association for Professionals in Infection Control and Epidemiology (APIC) honored leaders across the career spectrum at its 2025 Annual Conference in Phoenix, recognizing individuals who enhance patient safety through research, leadership, and daily practice.
Building Infection Prevention Capacity in the Middle East: A 7-Year Certification Success Story
June 17th 2025Despite rapid development, the Middle East faces a critical shortage of certified infection preventionists. A 7-year regional initiative has significantly boosted infection control capacity, increasing the number of certified professionals and elevating patient safety standards across health care settings.
Streamlined IFU Access Boosts Infection Control and Staff Efficiency
June 17th 2025A hospital-wide quality improvement project has transformed how staff access critical manufacturer instructions for use (IFUs), improving infection prevention compliance and saving time through a standardized, user-friendly digital system supported by unit-based training and interdepartmental collaboration.
Swift Isolation Protocol Shields Chicago Children’s Hospital During 2024 Measles Surge
June 17th 2025When Chicago logged its first measles cases linked to crowded migrant shelters last spring, one pediatric hospital moved in hours—not days—to prevent the virus from crossing its threshold. Their playbook offers a ready template for the next communicable-disease crisis.
Back to Basics: Hospital Restores Catheter-Associated UTI Rates to Prepandemic Baseline
June 16th 2025A 758-bed quaternary medical center slashed catheter-associated urinary tract infections (CAUTIs) by 45% over 2 years, proving that disciplined adherence to fundamental prevention steps, not expensive add-ons, can reverse the pandemic-era spike in device-related harm.