A German resident may be part of a groundbreaking medical milestone after apparently being cured of HIV, a feat accomplished by only six people worldwide in over four decades since the AIDS epidemic began.
This man is the seventh person in the world who appears to have been cured of the virus. However, experts have tempered the excitement with a warning that the treatment undergone by the carriers will be available to only a few—all the patients contracted the virus and later developed blood cancer that required a stem cell transplant to treat the malignancy.
The difficulty of curing HIV
The HIV virus is difficult to cure, partly because it creates many mutations that make it challenging to develop an effective vaccine. Additionally, some of the cells it infects in the body are “dormant” immune cells that do not destroy the virus. Carriers are required to take antiretroviral drugs that inhibit the virus’s replication but do not completely eliminate it.
Who are the six others cured of HIV?
The other six patients who are believed to have been cured of the virus begin with Timothy Ray Brown, known as the “Berlin patient,” who was the first man reported to be cured of HIV.
Adam Castillejo, known as the “London patient,” is a Venezuelan-born man living in England. He received a stem cell transplant for blood cancer. In 2016, he stopped taking HIV medication and was also considered cured.