Journal article

Immune checkpoint blockade in HIV

C Gubser, C Chiu, SR Lewin, TA Rasmussen

Ebiomedicine | ELSEVIER | Published : 2022

Abstract

Antiretroviral therapy (ART) has dramatically improved life expectancy for people with HIV (PWH) and helps to restore immune function but is not curative and must be taken lifelong. Achieving long term control of HIV in the absence of ART will likely require potent T cell function, but chronic HIV infection is associated with immune exhaustion that persists even on ART. This is driven by elevated expression of immune checkpoints that provide negative signalling to T cells. In individuals with cancer, immune checkpoint blockade augments tumour-directed T-cell responses resulting in significant clinical cures. There is therefore high interest if ICB can contribute to HIV cure or remission by r..

View full abstract

Grants

Awarded by LAM Therapeutics


Funding Acknowledgements

The study was funded by grants The Australian National Health and Medical Research Council (NHMRC; program grant APP149990 and NHMRC practitioner fellowship APP 1135851) . The funders had no role in paper design, data collection, data analysis, interpretation or writing of the paper. The authors wish to acknowledge the study participants and all human and animal participants of cited studies as well as the excellent work of other researchers that we have not been able to cite in this publication.