You are here: Home » News-IANS » Health-Medicine
Business Standard

Experimental HIV antibody effective on monkeys: Study

IANS  |  New York 

An experimental tested on a group of monkeys showed to be effective as it suppressed the for nearly six months without additional treatment, researchers have found.

The findings lend a clue to strategies that attempt to achieve sustained, drug-free viral remission in people living with HIV, the reported.

The researchers may have targeted the viral reservoir -- populations of long-lived, latently infected cells that harbour the and that lead to resurgent viral replication when suppressive therapy was stopped, the study noted.

"excels at evading the immune system by hiding out in certain immune cells," said Anthony S.

Fauci, at the and Infectious Diseases (NIAID) in Maryland, US.

"The can be suppressed to very low levels with antiretroviral therapy, but quickly rebounds to high levels if a person stops taking medications as prescribed.

"The findings from this early stage research offer further evidence that achieving sustained viral remission without daily medication might be possible," he added, in a paper released at the 25th Conference on Retroviruses and in

In the study, scientists infected rhesus macaques with simian-human immunodeficiency (SHIV), an HIV-like commonly used in nonhuman primate studies.

They then initiated daily (ART) for 96-weeks, during to suppress the to below detectable levels in the monkey's blood.

After discontinuation of ART, the rebounded in the blood of all monkeys that neither received or immune stimulant after a median of 21 days.

A group of monkeys who received the therapy combination showed a delayed viral rebound after a median of 112 days, another group did not rebound for at least 168 days.

"Our findings suggest that the development of interventions to activate and eliminate a fraction of the viral reservoir might be possible," the researchers said.

Compared with the which needs to be taken daily, to tend to last longer in the body and have shown promise for longer-acting therapeutics and prevention modalities, they noted.

--IANS

rt/and/vm

(This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

First Published: Mon, March 05 2018. 14:22 IST
RECOMMENDED FOR YOU
RECOMMENDED FOR YOU