Sufferer Came Off Meds 15 Years Ago Keeps HIV Naturally Under Control

Experts say that the woman – referred to only as the ‘Barcelona patient’ – is an exceptional case.

A volunteer wears a red ribbon during an AIDS awareness promotion at the Bell Tower to mark the World AIDS Day on December 1, 2008 in Xian of Shaanxi Province, China.  (Photo by China Photos/Getty Images)

An HIV sufferer who came off medication 15 years ago is still living with the virus, but her immune system is keeping it under control, offering hope to those coping with AIDS.

Experts in Spain say that the woman – referred to only as the ‘Barcelona patient’ – is an exceptional case in the world.

Her case – presented at the 24th International AIDS Conference in Montreal, Canada – is different from other high-profile cases that have seen sufferers completely cured of AIDS after receiving stem cell transplants to treat the blood diseases they were suffering from.

It was more than 15 years ago when the Barcelona patient was diagnosed with an acute HIV infection – the earliest stage of HIV infection – and was put on a clinical trial consisting of antiretroviral therapy for nine months and several doses of the immunosuppressant medication cyclosporine A.

A bottle of antiretroviral drug Truvada is displayed at Jack’s Pharmacy on November 23, 2010 in San Anselmo, California. (Photo Illustration by Justin Sullivan/Getty Images)

It was revealed at the conference that she still harbors viable HIV, but her immune system has controlled the replication of the virus over the years.

Experts at the Hospital Clinic de Barcelona will now attempt to replicate the woman’s immunological mechanisms in other infected patients.

Antiretroviral therapy – the standard for keeping AIDS under control – is effective in suppressing viral replication within the body and blocking transmission to others, leaving the patient with such a low level of HIV in the blood that it becomes undetectable in a conventional analysis.

But the virus persists in reservoirs, so if the therapy is stopped, it has the ability to replicate and can attack the patient again.

However, a very small group of people, such as the Barcelona patient, who are ‘post-treatment controllers’ and, after coming off medication, manage to maintain undetectable viral loads.

Antiretroviral pills Truvada sit on a tray at Jack’s Pharmacy on November 23, 2010 in San Anselmo, California. (Photo Illustration by Justin Sullivan/Getty Images)

Josep Mallolas – head of the HIV unit at the Hospital Clinic de Barcelona – said the woman’s case “is exceptional not only because there are very few people with long-term post-treatment control – 15 years, but also because of her HIV control mechanism, which is different from that described in ‘elite controller’ patients and other cases documented so far.”

‘Elite controller’ patients are people who are infected with HIV but never develop symptoms and require no medication due to an extremely rare natural response.

Attendees of the conference in Canada also heard of a 66-year-old American man who had apparently been cured of HIV through a stem cell transplant to treat blood cancer. This would make him the fifth person to have been apparently cured of HIV.