Top Scientists Unite to Develop Global Scientific Strategy
          Towards an HIV Cure
          
           Boston 
          -- February, 28, 2011 -- More than 30 scientists gathered for a one-day 
          meeting prior to the 18th Conference on Retroviruses and Opportunistic 
          Infections (CROI) to launch an international working group on HIV reservoirs 
          and strategies to control them. Under the auspices of the International 
          AIDS Society, the scientists will guide the development of a global 
          scientific strategy towards an HIV cure.
Boston 
          -- February, 28, 2011 -- More than 30 scientists gathered for a one-day 
          meeting prior to the 18th Conference on Retroviruses and Opportunistic 
          Infections (CROI) to launch an international working group on HIV reservoirs 
          and strategies to control them. Under the auspices of the International 
          AIDS Society, the scientists will guide the development of a global 
          scientific strategy towards an HIV cure.  
        
          The strategy aims at building a global consensus on the state of the 
          HIV reservoirs field and defining scientific priorities that must be 
          addressed by future research to tackle HIV persistency in patients undergoing 
          antiretroviral therapy, the key hurdle impeding any alternative to long-term 
          therapy. This global scientific strategy will help mobilize and focus 
          resources to fund the most promising strategies towards a sterilizing 
          or a functional cure, and stimulate international research collaborations. 
          
        
          The international scientific working group will be co-chaired by Professor 
          Francoise Barré-Sinoussi, International AIDS Society (IAS) President-elect 
          and 2008 Nobel Laureate for Medicine, and Professor Steve Deeks, University 
          of California, San Francisco (UCSF) and Positive Health Program (AIDS 
          Program) at San Francisco General Hospital. 
        
          The working group will work closely with an advisory board composed 
          of leading advocates and major research stakeholders in HIV cure, including 
          representatives of people living with HIV, funders and clinicians from 
          high prevalence settings. The advisory group will be co-chaired by Pr. 
          Françoise Barré-Sinoussi and Dr. Jack Whitescarver, Director 
          of the Office of AIDS Research at the National Institutes of Health. 
          
        
          "Antiretroviral therapy has greatly improved the quality of life 
          and reduced mortality rates of people living with HIV. However, even 
          in successfully treated individuals, HIV remains dormant in certain 
          cells, obliging patients to undertake life-long treatment to keep these 
          viral reservoirs under control. If we are to envisage a successful discontinuation 
          of treatment, we need to better understand why and how HIV infection 
          persists despite treatment and to develop new therapeutic strategies," 
          said Pr. Françoise Barré-Sinoussi. 
          
          
        This 
          initiative comes on the back of the successful workshop "Towards 
          a Cure: HIV Reservoirs and Strategies to Control Them," held in 
          conjunction with the XVIII International AIDS Conference (AIDS 2010) 
          in Vienna in July 2010. The International AIDS Society (IAS) decided 
          to continue to mobilize the scientific community and guide the development 
          of the global scientific strategy Towards an HIV Cure, which will be 
          presented at the XIX International AIDS Conference (AIDS 2012), to be 
          held in Washington DC in July 2012. 
          
          
        In 
          line with the International AIDS Society's strategic plan for 2010-2014, 
          the IAS Governing Council has prioritized an HIV cure as one of its 
          four key policy areas. "It is our mission to mobilize the scientific 
          community and advocate for increased investments in HIV cure research, 
          in order to develop short-term and cost-effective treatment strategies," 
          said Bertrand Audoin, IAS Executive Director. 
        
          "As a physician, I am fully aware that HIV persistence remains 
          a daunting and complex challenge," said Elly Katabira, IAS President. 
          "But we need to offer people living with HIV an alternative to 
          the burden of a difficult life-long ARV regimen." 
        
          Given the current economic situation and the pace of new infections 
          that, in resource-limited countries, are still outstripping numbers 
          on treatment by five to two, long-term remission of infected individuals, 
          or even eradication of viral reservoirs is a time sensitive priority. 
          
        
          About the IAS 
        
           The 
          International AIDS Society (IAS) is the world's leading independent 
          association of HIV professionals, with over 16,000 members from more 
          than 196 countries working at all levels of the global response to AIDS. 
          Our members include researchers from all disciplines, clinicians, public 
          health and community practitioners on the frontlines of the epidemic, 
          as well as policy and programme planners. The IAS is the custodian of 
          the biennial International AIDS Conference and lead organizer of the 
          IAS Conference on HIV Pathogenesis, Treatment and Prevention, which 
          will be held in Rome, Italy in July 2011.
The 
          International AIDS Society (IAS) is the world's leading independent 
          association of HIV professionals, with over 16,000 members from more 
          than 196 countries working at all levels of the global response to AIDS. 
          Our members include researchers from all disciplines, clinicians, public 
          health and community practitioners on the frontlines of the epidemic, 
          as well as policy and programme planners. The IAS is the custodian of 
          the biennial International AIDS Conference and lead organizer of the 
          IAS Conference on HIV Pathogenesis, Treatment and Prevention, which 
          will be held in Rome, Italy in July 2011.