The trial conducted in Durban, South Africa,
showed that 20 per cent of participants remain off ART and are virally suppressed
after one-and-a-half years, according to a press statement from the researchers.
The results of the study were presented at the recent 2025 Conference on Retroviruses and Opportunistic Infections (CROI), in San Francisco, USA.
In the study, the first HIV cure clinical
trial in Africa, the researchers treated participants with antiretrovirals soon
after they acquired HIV. Once the virus was controlled by ART, they
administered powerful immune-boosters - which helps the immune system fight the
virus more effectively. Under close medical supervision, participants then
stopped ART to see if their bodies could control the virus on their own.
The study was led by the HIV Pathogenesis Program at the University of KwaZulu-Natal, a research and capacity-building initiative within the larger Santhe consortium.
Other partners are the Africa Health Research Institute, the Ragon Institute of Mass General, MIT and Harvard, and Gilead Sciences.
Prof Ndung’u said that further research needs to be done by scientists to know how some people were able to control the virus to help in the search for the cure.
He said: “While this treatment approach didn’t work for most participants, it is still a significant development in HIV cure research. Studying how the 20% managed to control the virus on their own will help scientists develop better HIV cure strategies, as well as work out ways to improve future treatments.”
The trial is significant because it proves that complex HIV cure research can be successfully conducted in resource-limited settings where the need is greatest, and highlights the importance of including African populations in global scientific advancements.