Combination Immunotherapy Shows Promise — 7 of 10 Patients Sustain HIV Control Without ART
A new clinical trial combining therapeutic vaccination, broadly neutralizing antibodies (bNAbs), and immune stimulation enabled 7 of 10 people living with HIV to keep viral levels low for months after stopping antiretroviral therapy (ART), offering a potential path toward long-term, drug-free HIV control.

Recent advances in HIV research have brought hope that long-term control of the virus without lifelong reliance on antiretroviral therapy (ART) may be within reach. A groundbreaking study conducted by researchers at University of California, San Francisco (UCSF), published December 2025 on Nature, demonstrates that a carefully designed combination immunotherapy can achieve sustained HIV control in a majority of participants after stopping ART.
What the Study Did
The single-arm proof-of-concept study enrolled 10 people living with HIV who were on stable ART. The researchers administered a three-part immunotherapeutic regimen:
- Therapeutic vaccination using an HIV/Gag conserved-element (CE) targeted DNA + IL-12 prime followed by an MVA-based boost vaccine.
- Broadly neutralizing antibodies (bNAbs) + immune stimulation two bNAbs (10-1074 and VRC07-523LS) were infused during ART suppression together with a toll-like receptor 9 agonist, Lefitolimod.
- Repeat bNAb administration at ART interruption before stopping ART, a second infusion of the two bNAbs was given, after which ART was interrupted and participants were monitored.
This multi-modal intervention aims to “prime, purge, and protect” stimulate HIV-specific immune responses, reduce latent reservoir activity, and neutralize free virus, giving the body a fighting chance to control HIV on its own.
Encouraging Results: Post-Intervention Control
When ART was interrupted, 7 of the 10 participants demonstrated post-intervention control of HIV. For some this meant a low stable viral load (“partial control”), and for at least one, complete absence of detectable virus (“aviremic control”).
Importantly, this control appeared independent of residual bNAb levels meaning that lasting suppression was likely due to an enhanced and re-educated immune response, rather than just lingering drug effect.
A key immunological correlate: early after virus rebound, individuals who mounted a robust expansion of activated CD8+ T cells tended to achieve lower viral set-points. This suggests that the therapy helped strengthen the body’s natural virus-fighting T-cell responses.
Why This Matters
- Proof-of-concept for ART-free control: For decades, ART has transformed HIV from a death sentence into a manageable chronic condition but it requires lifelong treatment. This study offers rare, tangible evidence that HIV control might eventually be possible without continuous drugs.
- Supports immunotherapy-based cure strategies: Previous success had mostly been limited to non-human primate models. This human data strengthens the case for combination immunotherapy as a viable path forward.
- Potential paradigm shift: If refined and validated in larger trials, such regimens could reduce dependence on lifelong ART, minimize side-effects, and improve quality of life for millions living with HIV worldwide.
Challenges & What’s Next
- Small study, no control arm: With only 10 participants and no randomized control group, results need confirmation in larger, controlled studies.
- Durability unclear: While some participants maintained control for many months, it is unclear how long this control will last long-term or whether occasional “blips” will occur.
- Need for optimization: The regimen is complex (vaccination, infusions, immune activator), and research must determine optimal dosing, scheduling, and safety profile.
Meanwhile, several other clinical trials are underway or planned that combine vaccines, bNAbs, and immune modulators including regimens using different antibody combinations, long-acting bNAbs, and alternative adjuvants to refine and improve on this approach.
Broader Context: Immune-Based HIV Research
This new human trial aligns with a growing body of research exploring immune-based HIV control. For example, a study in non-human primates showed that a PD-1enhanced DNA vaccine conferred long-term virus control without ART for years.
Overcoming HIV’s capacity for latency and immune evasion remains the biggest challenge in finding a cure. But the current success combining vaccination, antibodies, and immune stimulation suggests that the right “cocktail” might re-educate the immune system to do what ART does: keep HIV in check perhaps, one day, permanently.
Conclusion: The new immunotherapy trial from UCSF marks a major milestone showing for the first time in humans that a combination of therapeutic vaccine, broadly neutralizing antibodies, and immune stimulation can enable sustained HIV control after stopping ART. While it’s not yet a cure, it’s a promising proof-of-concept that hints at a future where lifelong ART may not be the only way to live well with HIV.
References
- Correlates of HIV-1 control after combination immunotherapy – Nature – (Accessed on Dec 02, 2025)
- Combination immunotherapy induces post-intervention control of HIV – Pub Med – (Accessed on Dec 02, 2025)
- Scientists Achieve Sustained HIV Control Without Lifelong Drugs – Neuro Science News – (Accessed on Dec 02, 2025)
- Combination Immunotherapy Shows Promise for HIV Control After ART Discontinuation – Med Path – (Accessed on Dec 02, 2025)







