Abstract

Combination antiretroviral therapy (cART) has led to a major reduction in HIV-related mortality and morbidity. However, HIV still cannot be cured. With the absence of an effective prophylactic or therapeutic vaccine, increasing numbers of infected people, emerging new toxicities secondary to cART and the need for life-long treatment, there is now a real urgency to find a cure for HIV.There are currently multiple barriers to curing HIV. The most significant barrier is the establishment of a latent or "silent" infection in resting CD4+ T cells. In latent HIV infection, the virus is able to integrate into the host cell genome, but does not proceed to active replication. As a consequence, antiviral agents, as well as the immune system, are unable to eliminate these long-lived, latently infected cells. Reactivation of latently infected resting CD4+ T cells can then re-establish infection once cART is stopped. Other significant barriers to cure include residual viral replication in patients receiving cART, even when the virus is not detectable by conventional assays. In addition, HIV can be sequestered in anatomical reservoirs, such as the brain, gastrointestinal tract and genitourinary tract.Achieving either a functional cure (long-term control of HIV in the absence of cART) or a sterilizing cure (elimination of all HIV-infected cells) remains a major challenge. Several studies have now demonstrated that treatment intensification appears to have little impact on latent reservoirs. Some potential and promising approaches that may reduce the latent reservoir include very early initiation of cART and the use of agents that could potentially reverse latent infection.Agents that reverse latent infection will promote viral production; however, simultaneous administration of cART will prevent subsequent rounds of viral replication. Such drugs as histone deacetylase inhibitors, currently used and licensed for the treatment of some cancers, or activating latently infected resting cells with cytokines, such as IL-7 or prostratin, show promising results in reversing latency in vitro when used either alone or in combination. In order to move forward toward clinical trials that target eradication, there needs to be careful consideration of the risks and benefits of these approaches, agreement on the most informative endpoints for eradication studies and greater engagement of the infected community.

Highlights

  • The XI International AIDS Conference in Vancouver in 1996 marked the beginning of the great success story of combination antiretroviral therapy

  • Why do we need a cure for HIV? Even with the major successes of Combination antiretroviral therapy (cART), full life expectancy for patients living with HIV has not been restored

  • In a prospective study of 3990 HIV-infected individuals and 379,872 HIV-uninfected controls in Denmark, the probability of survival was examined in the period prior to cART (1995-1996), during early cART (1997-1999) and during late cART (2000-2005) [5]

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Summary

Introduction

The XI International AIDS Conference in Vancouver in 1996 marked the beginning of the great success story of combination antiretroviral therapy (cART). Over the past 15 years, mortality and morbidity from HIV has fallen dramatically in both resource-poor and resourcerich countries [1,2,3]. Treatment has become simpler and less toxic, and more than 5 million people in low- and middle-income countries are receiving cART [4]. Despite these major successes, and in the absence of an

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