7th person likely ‘cured’ of HIV in a remarkable case
A seventh person has essentially been cured of HIV after receiving a stem cell transplant nearly a decade ago, doctors announced Thursday.
The 60-year-old unidentified German man was suffering from acute myeloid leukemia when he underwent the risky procedure to replace his unhealthy bone marrow in October 2015.
He quit taking anti-retroviral drugs — which stop HIV from reproducing — in September 2018. He remains in viral remission and appears to be cancer-free.
“A healthy person has many wishes, a sick person only one,” the man, who wishes to remain anonymous, said of his progress.
Dr. Christian Gaebler, a physician-scientist at the Charité-Universitätsmedizin Berlin, is slated to present the case next week at the 25th International AIDS Conference.
