Journal article
Modeling the timing of antilatency drug administration during HIV treatment
J Petravic, A Martyushev, JC Reece, SJ Kent, MP Davenport
Journal of Virology | Published : 2014
DOI: 10.1128/JVI.01701-14
Abstract
Latently infected cells are considered a major barrier to the cure of HIV infection, since they are long-lived under antiretroviral therapy (ART) and cause viral replication to restart soon after stopping ART. In the last decade, different types of antilatency drugs have been explored with the aim of reactivating and purging this latent reservoir and the hope of achieving a cure. Because of toxicity and safety considerations, antilatency drugs can only be given for a short time to patients on long-term ART, with little effect. We recently investigated the turnover of latently infected cells during active infection and have found that it was strongly correlated with viral load. This implies t..
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Awarded by NHMRC (Australia)
Funding Acknowledgements
This study was supported by NHMRC (Australia) grants APP 1025567 and APP 1052979. M.P.D. is an NHMRC Senior Research Fellow.