HIV therapies currently need to be taken regularly for life – longer-lasting antibody treatments could one day offer an equally effective one-shot alternative

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Antiretroviral therapy has had an enormous impact on treating HIV infections around the world. The millions of people currently taking these treatments under medical supervision can reasonably expect to reduce their viral loads to undetectable levels, eliminate the risk of transmission and live a normal life span. However, antiretroviral therapy is not without shortcomings. People need to take these medications regularly for life, and low compliance can lead to drug resistance.

There is a promising new option on the horizon. Ronald C. Desrosiers, Professor of Pathology, Vice-chair for Research, University of Miami, talks about the longer-lasting antibody treatments that could become game-changers for the treatment of HIV infection.

Read the full story at The Conversation.

 

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