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Possible third cure to HIV: progress in a time of regression

In the time of COVID-19, ‘any positive news about how we can better attack HIV is welcome right now,’ says Northwestern Medicine expert Richard D’Aquila

CHICAGO — Following the news that a third person has been cured of HIV, a Northwestern Medicine expert says using partially matched blood cells could be used to cure many people living with both cancer and HIV, though he said this treatment is not likely to be offered to people without life-threatening cancer.

The novel treatment, which uses blood from umbilical cords, may have less complications than past cures and open doors for patients of more diverse backgrounds to receive the treatment.

Richard T D’Aquila is the associate vice president of research at Northwestern University Feinberg School of Medicine, and the Howard Taylor Ricketts Professor of Medicine in the infectious disease division. He studies novel approaches to HIV treatment using intrinsic immunity.

For an interview contact lila.reynolds@northwestern.edu.

Opportunities for diversity

“Up until now the two previous cases required a living donor,” D’Aquila said. “You had to have a good match of what are called HLA alleles to make sure that the donor and the recipient had very similar looking immune cells. It’s nearly impossible to find that match among the very few people who have this mutation that does not allow HIV to enter immune cells. 

“This study was designed to test this idea that a more common repository of blood cells comes from umbilical cord blood may help given the larger number of available cells. During childbirth, it's easy to get and so there are groups that have been banking these umbilical cord blood cells.”

An improvement on bone marrow

“The previous cases both had graft versus host disease, which happens when the donor’s immune cells cause an immunological reaction against the recipient’s cells,” D’Aquila said. “Some of the recipient cells get attacked and killed by the donor’s grafted cells and for cancer, that helps clean up the last little bits of cancer and leads to a higher chance of remission.

“People thought it might be the same for HIV and could help to get rid of HIV, and then both men had really bad graft versus host disease. But this woman, apparently, didn’t have any graft versus host disease, suggesting the disease is not a necessary part of curing HIV.  

“She’s still 14 months out and looks like there's no HIV there now. It is still relatively early — 14 months is not everything and you can't be 100% sure of a durable cure for a while, but it's sure a good start.”

‘It’s not so earth-shaking’

“It’s not so earth-shaking,” D’Aquila said. “All of these cases had a life-threatening cancer and they needed this procedure to cure their cancer, and so they use cells that have this special mutation that doesn't allow HIV to enter the immune cells. They still had the good cancer killing capacity of those immune cells but they couldn't get infected with HIV after the patient’s own immune system was wiped out and then re-populated with someone else’s cells.

“I don’t think it should be considered a benign procedure. This woman had a really easy course and was only in the hospital for a relatively brief period of time — I don't think that's a guarantee. I can't see that this would be offered to people who don't have a malignancy. We may get there if we do it a lot more and we refine the procedure, but it's not next month that people are going to start getting umbilical cord blood cell transplants.”

‘Positive news about how we can better attack HIV is welcome’

“I'm glad to see that we're continuing to make progress and it's actually important at this point in time because the COVID pandemic hasn't helped the HIV epidemic,” D’Aquila said. “Our efforts to decrease the HIV epidemic have suffered because of COVID, so any positive news about how we can better attack HIV I think is very welcome right now.”