Doobie Doo
Veteran
Woman’s own immune system has possibly cured her of HIV
Researchers were unable to find any viable HIV in the woman’s body even after using highly sophisticated and sensitive tests to scan over 1 billion of her cells.
Argentinian woman becomes second known person 'naturally' cured of HIV
NOV. 16, 202102:34
Nov. 15, 2021, 6:20 PM EST / Updated Nov. 16, 2021, 2:02 PM EST
By Benjamin Ryan
A woman in Argentina has become only the second documented person whose own immune system may have cured her of HIV.
Researchers have dubbed the 30-year-old mother, who was first diagnosed with HIV in 2013, the “Esperanza patient,” after the town in Argentina where she lives. In English, “esperanza” means “hope.”
“I enjoy being healthy,” the Esperanza patient, who spoke on condition of anonymity due to the stigma associated with the virus, told NBC News in Spanish over email. “I have a healthy family. I don’t have to medicate, and I live as though nothing has happened. This already is a privilege.”
This is really the miracle of the human immune system that did it.
DR. XU YU, RAGON INSTITUTE
The co-authors of the study, which was published Monday in the Annals of Internal Medicine, said they believe their findings will indeed bring hope to the estimated 38 million people globally living with the virus and to the ever-expanding HIV-cure research field. The case serves as one of two proofs of concept that a so-called sterilizing cure of the virus is apparently possible through natural immunity.
“This is really the miracle of the human immune system that did it,” said Dr. Xu Yu, a viral immunologist at the Ragon Institute in Boston, who in partnership with Dr. Natalia Laufer, a physician scientist at INBIRS Institute in Buenos Aries, Argentina, led the exhaustive search for any viable HIV in the woman’s body.
“Now we have to figure out the mechanisms,” said Dr. Steven Deeks, a prominent HIV cure researcher at University of California, San Francisco, who was not involved with the study. “How does this happen? And how can we recapitulate this therapeutically in everybody?”
Scientists are pursuing the byzantine task of curing HIV on multiple fronts, including through gene therapy; “kick and kill” efforts to flush the virus from its so-called reservoir or “block and lock” methods to keep it trapped in cells; and therapeutic vaccines that would enhance the body’s immune response to the virus.
To date, researchers have successfully cured two other people therapeutically — in both cases through complex and dangerous stem cell transplants.
00:07 /11:11
No longer a death sentence: How living with HIV has changed
JUNE 10, 202111:11
Researchers were unable to find any viable HIV in the woman’s body even after using highly sophisticated and sensitive tests to scan over 1 billion of her cells.
Argentinian woman becomes second known person 'naturally' cured of HIV
NOV. 16, 202102:34
Nov. 15, 2021, 6:20 PM EST / Updated Nov. 16, 2021, 2:02 PM EST
By Benjamin Ryan
A woman in Argentina has become only the second documented person whose own immune system may have cured her of HIV.
Researchers have dubbed the 30-year-old mother, who was first diagnosed with HIV in 2013, the “Esperanza patient,” after the town in Argentina where she lives. In English, “esperanza” means “hope.”
“I enjoy being healthy,” the Esperanza patient, who spoke on condition of anonymity due to the stigma associated with the virus, told NBC News in Spanish over email. “I have a healthy family. I don’t have to medicate, and I live as though nothing has happened. This already is a privilege.”
This is really the miracle of the human immune system that did it.
DR. XU YU, RAGON INSTITUTE
The co-authors of the study, which was published Monday in the Annals of Internal Medicine, said they believe their findings will indeed bring hope to the estimated 38 million people globally living with the virus and to the ever-expanding HIV-cure research field. The case serves as one of two proofs of concept that a so-called sterilizing cure of the virus is apparently possible through natural immunity.
“This is really the miracle of the human immune system that did it,” said Dr. Xu Yu, a viral immunologist at the Ragon Institute in Boston, who in partnership with Dr. Natalia Laufer, a physician scientist at INBIRS Institute in Buenos Aries, Argentina, led the exhaustive search for any viable HIV in the woman’s body.
“Now we have to figure out the mechanisms,” said Dr. Steven Deeks, a prominent HIV cure researcher at University of California, San Francisco, who was not involved with the study. “How does this happen? And how can we recapitulate this therapeutically in everybody?”
Scientists are pursuing the byzantine task of curing HIV on multiple fronts, including through gene therapy; “kick and kill” efforts to flush the virus from its so-called reservoir or “block and lock” methods to keep it trapped in cells; and therapeutic vaccines that would enhance the body’s immune response to the virus.
To date, researchers have successfully cured two other people therapeutically — in both cases through complex and dangerous stem cell transplants.
00:07 /11:11
No longer a death sentence: How living with HIV has changed
JUNE 10, 202111:11



