Last updated on 30 April 2025
Tackling HIV continues to be a major public health challenge, mainly because the persistence of viral reservoirs means that people living with HIV need to take lifelong antiretroviral treatment. But some individuals, known as “post-treatment controllers,” are able to maintain an undetectable viral load even after stopping treatment. In a study funded by ANRS Emerging Infectious Diseases (ANRS MIE), scientists from the Institut Pasteur, Inserm and the Paris Public Hospital Network (AP-HP) identified specific immunogenetic characteristics in a group of these individuals. The research provides novel information about the immune mechanisms associated with HIV control in the absence of antiretroviral treatment and offers new prospects for the development of immunotherapies aimed at achieving remission or a cure for HIV infection. The research was published in Med on 28 April 2025.
Cells infected with HIV persist in the body, forming what are known as viral reservoirs, even in persons receiving antiretroviral therapy. These reservoirs lead to rapid viral rebound if treatment is stopped. But some individuals are able to achieve long-term control of the virus after discontinuing treatment. These “post-treatment controllers” were described in the VISCONTI study in 2013. They are considered to be in long-term virological remission from HIV infection. In some cases, they have been controlling the virus for more than 25 years without treatment. Starting treatment early, within a few days of infection, during the acute infection period, seems to facilitate post-treatment control of HIV,1 but the immune mechanisms had previously remained unclear.
This study, coordinated by Asier Sáez-Cirión, Head of the Institut Pasteur’s Viral Reservoirs and Immune Control Unit, has found that some genetic characteristics associated with innate immunity cells (natural killer or NK cells) are very frequently found in post-treatment controllers in the VISCONTI cohort. A retrospective analysis of the ANRS CO6 PRIMO cohort (where the scientists analysed the genetic characteristics of more than 1,600 participants monitored since the first weeks following infection) confirmed that the presence of these genetic markers seems to encourage lasting HIV remission in individuals who began treatment early and then stopped it for various reasons. The scientists showed that these genetic markers are accompanied by the existence of specific NK cell populations that are better able to control infection.
These results support the role of NK cells in long-term HIV remission and could guide the development of novel immunotherapies
Ongoing clinical trial
To confirm these findings, a clinical trial entitled ANRS 175 RHIVIERA01, sponsored by Inserm/ANRS MIE, was launched in March 2023. The aim of the trial is to analyse links between the genetic markers of NK cells and post-treatment control. As part of the trial, 16 individuals with these genetic characteristics, who began treatment immediately after infection, were invited to discontinue treatment under close surveillance. The analysis is ongoing. At the same time, the scientists are characterising exactly how these genetic characteristics associated with remission influence the programme and function of NK cells. This approach could pave the way for immunotherapies aimed at mobilising these specific cells in other people living with HIV.
This study is associated with the VISCONTI study and the PRIMO cohort, supported and funded by ANRS MIE. The scientists also received funding from the NIH, especially in connection with the ERASE HIV project, which is seeking a cure for HIV.
This discovery represents a crucial step in efforts to achieve sustained remission from HIV infection. At a time when programmes offering access to antiretroviral therapy are coming under threat, there is an urgent need for novel therapies enabling people living with HIV to lead a normal life without the need for treatment
A genetic fingerprint associated with durable HIV remission after interruption of antiretroviral treatment. ANRS VISCONTI/PRIMO, Med, le 28 avril 2025
Asma Essat1,#, Anaïs Chapel2,3,#, Kahina Amocrane4, Valérie Monceaux2,3, Céline Didier5, Adeline Melard6,7, Elise Gardiennet6,7, Véronique Avettand-Fenoel6,7,8, Sylvie Orr1, Faroudy Boufassa1, Olivier Lambotte9, Michaela Müller-Trutwin3, Camille Lécuroux9, Antoine Chéret7,10, Cécile Goujard10, Christine Rouzioux6, Sophie Caillat-Zucman4, Laurent Hocqueloux11, Daniel Scott-Algara12, Laurence Meyer1 and Asier Sáez-Cirión2,3,*; ANRS PRIMO cohort and VISCONTI study.
#Equal contributors
ANRS Emerging Infectious Diseases is an autonomous agency of Inserm (the French National Institute for Health and Medical Research). Its mission is to facilitate, evaluate, coordinate and fund research into HIV/AIDS, viral hepatitis, sexually transmitted infections, tuberculosis and emerging and re-emerging infectious diseases.
The Institut Pasteur, a non-profit foundation with recognized charitable status set up by Louis Pasteur in 1887, is today an internationally renowned center for biomedical research. In the pursuit of its mission to tackle diseases in France and throughout the world, the Institut Pasteur operates in four main areas: research, public health, training, and development of research applications. More than 2,800 employees work at its campus in Paris.
For more information: https://www.pasteur.fr/en
Founded in 1964, Inserm is a public scientific and technological institute dedicated to biomedical research and human health, and is involved in the entire range of activities from the laboratory to the patient’s bedside. It also partners with the most prestigious research institutions in the world that are committed to scientific challenges and progress in these fields.
For more information: https://www.inserm.fr/