
Response
to STI is determined by virus rather than immunological response

Important
findings may explain the different responses that have been reported following
treatment interruptions and the results appear to have little to do with
the immunological effects that were being closely studied.
Important
findings may explain the different responses that have been reported following
treatment interruptions and the results appear to have little to do with
the immunological effects that were being closely studied.
Low pretreatment
env diversity in patients controlling viraemia after STI suggests
that those viral characteristics were not influenced by STI but were already
present years before any therapy was started.
The researchers
analysed viral isolates taken from 20 chronically infected patients participating
in the Swiss-Spanish Intermittent Therapy Trial (SSITT) which had previously
reported no cumulative benefit from several planned treatment breaks.
This analysis found that SSITT-baseline neutralising activity but not
HIV-specific CTL- or T-help responses were associated with control of
viraemia.
Ref: Günthard
H, Joos B, Kuster H et al. Virus characteristics predict viraemia control
after cessation of antiretroviral therapy. Abstract 56.
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