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A cure for HIV is in sight. Here’s what scientists are working on.
"The future looks bright as far as a cure," one top HIV cure researcher told LGBTQ Nation.
Single-pill treatment proves as effective at suppressing virus as multi-pill therapy, while long-acting preventive injections ...
Today, advancements in medicine have rendered HIV a manageable condition that allows most individuals to enjoy a typical ...
At Western University, a bold idea is taking shape: what if lifesaving medical breakthroughs were designed from the very beginning to reach everyone ...
HIV researchers in Australia have figured out a way to make the virus visible in white blood cells using mRNA, something that could lead to an eventual cure. Researchers from the Peter Doherty ...
Scientists have found a breakthrough in the search for a cure for HIV, after research uncovered a development “previously thought impossible”. HIV can ‘hide’ itself in white blood cells, meaning the ...
For more than 40 years, scientists have chased a virus that refuses to stand still. HIV mutates quickly, hiding in long-lived ...
Study dissects HIV reservoir clones that persist on ART, revealing how CD8+ T cells and resistance pathways could be harnessed for future cure strategies.
New evidence from global HIV research suggests that the first widespread cure for HIV may be possible in children who receive antiretroviral therapy (ART) early in life. Pediatrician and immunologist ...
Scientists isolated and grew rare HIV reservoir clones that allow the virus to persist despite therapy. The study shows that ...
One-third of children with HIV who received very early ART had no detectable virus in their body for at least 12 weeks after stopping treatment, according to study findings. It was another sign that ...
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