Can interruption/withdrawl of anti-retroviral therapy provide personalized immunotherapy against HIV-1?
Peter Alan BretscherGhassan A Al-YassinPublished in: Scandinavian journal of immunology (2020)
We propose a treatment of HIV-1+ individuals designed to harness protective immunity, lead to viral containment, and so render the individual minimally infectious. A few HIV-infected individuals, 'elite controllers', generate a stable Th1, cytotoxic T lymphocyte response that contains the virus. Most infected individuals, in the absence of therapy, first generate a similarly protective response that evolves with time a Th2 component, associated with antibody production and loss of viral control. Cessation of anti-retroviral treatment after three years results in viral rebound in most, but about one in seven individuals contains the virus, so-called post-treatment controllers. We suggest an understanding, of how the Th1/Th2 phenotype of immune responses is controlled, can explain these different outcomes and leads us to propose a non-invasive, personalized strategy of immunotherapy. We propose that monitoring the relative prevalence of HIV-1 specific IgG1 and IgG2 antibodies can provide a biomarker for deciding when to interrupt/withdraw anti-retroviral therapy to optimally harness protective immunity.
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