A single injection for newborns could protect them against HIV for years, study suggests
The study is one of the first to show that the first weeks of life offer a critical window where the immune system is naturally more tolerant, meaning it is the optimal time to deliver gene therapies that would otherwise be rejected at older ages.
Researchers hope the gene therapy jab could be used in the future to fight against paediatric infections in high-risk areas.
'Nearly 300 children are infected with HIV each day,' said first author Amir Ardeshir, associate professor of microbiology and immunology at the Tulane National Primate Research Center in the US.
'This approach could help protect newborns in high-risk areas during the most vulnerable period of their lives.'
The study, published in the journal Nature, created a gene therapy that programs cells to produce HIV-fighting antibodies.
An animal study that tested the injection on non-human primates found it protected them from infection for at least three years without the need for a booster shot. But this was only if the injection was administered in the first month of life.
In comparison, those that received the gene therapy between eight and 12 weeks after birth did not tolerate the treatment, study authors explain.
'This is a one-and-done treatment that fits the critical time when these mothers with HIV in resource-limited areas are most likely to see a doctor,' Dr Ardeshir said.
'As long as the treatment is delivered close to birth, the baby's immune system will accept it and believe it's part of itself.'
Globally, an estimated 1.3 million women and girls living with HIV become pregnant every year, according to the World Health Organization (WHO).
But if they do not receive medication, the rate of transmission of HIV from the mother to her child either during pregnancy, labour, delivery or breastfeeding ranges between 15 per cent and 45 per cent, according to WHO data.
Although antiviral treatments can suppress the virus and limit transmission, adherence to treatment and doctor visits decline after childbirth, particularly in areas with limited access to healthcare, the study authors noted.
This gene therapy uses a harmless virus that can deliver genetic code to cells, but is different to a vaccine. This virus was injected into muscle cells and delivered instructions to produce antibodies that are capable of neutralising multiple strains of HIV.
Researchers explained that previous studies have found repeated infusions of the injection are needed for it to work.
But by injecting it into muscle cells, researchers say they become 'micro-factories that just keep producing these antibodies'.
Newborns showed greater tolerance to the jab, which prevented infection during breastfeeding. However, older infants and juveniles were more likely to have produced anti-drug antibodies that shut down the treatment.
In addition, exposing a foetus to the antibodies from the gene therapy before birth helps older infants accept the therapy.
However, because it has only been tested on animals, researchers still do not know if it will work on human children.
If successful, this treatment could dramatically reduce mother-to-child HIV transmission rates in high-risk regions such as sub-Saharan Africa, where 90 per cent of paediatric HIV cases can be found.
'Nothing like this was possible to achieve even 10 years ago,' Dr Ardeshir said. 'This was a huge result, and now we have all the ingredients to take on HIV.'
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles

Wall Street Journal
39 minutes ago
- Wall Street Journal
No Alzheimer's Drug for Old Men?
Increasing evidence shows that anti-amyloid Alzheimer's treatments can slow disease progression and give patients years more of quality time with loved ones. So will the Trump Administration at long last drop the Biden rules that restrict access to these medicines? Two studies presented at the Alzheimer's Association International Conference last week show that the benefits of amyloid-clearing monoclonal antibodies by Eli Lilly and Biogen-Eisai grow over time. The drugs slowed cognitive decline in clinical trials used for Food and Drug Administration approval by some 25% to 36% over 18 months. In follow-up studies, these benefits doubled at three years for Lilly's treatment and roughly quadrupled over four years for Biogen-Eisai's. That's great news for patients.


E&E News
4 hours ago
- E&E News
Atlantic marine monument survey finds rare whale with calf
A recent survey of the only Atlantic coast marine national monument revealed the vast area off Cape Cod, Massachusetts, is flourishing with marine mammals, including federally protected fin whales and sperm whales, according to the New England Aquarium, which conducted the survey last month. In total, researchers spotted more than 1,000 marine animals in the Northeast Canyons and Seamounts Marine National Monument, a roughly 5,000-square-mile protected area 130 miles off Cape Cod, including a 'a rich variety of other whales, dolphins and rays,' according to a release from the aquarium. Kate Laemmle, an assistant research scientist at the aquarium's Anderson Cabot Research Center who participated in the survey, said it was a 'rare occurrence' to see the federally endangered female fin whale with a calf. Fin whales are the second largest whale species in the ocean, according to NOAA, and are highly vulnerable to ship strikes. There are thought to be fewer than 8,000 fin whales off the Canadian and U.S. Atlantic coasts. Advertisement 'It reinforces that the long-term health of our oceans depends on protecting these unique habitats and the endangered species that depend on them,' Laemmle said in an interview.


CBS News
4 hours ago
- CBS News
Minnesota pollution agency could have alerted people whose health was at risk from lead exposure sooner
WCCO Investigates discovered the Minnesota Pollution Control Agency (MPCA) could have alerted people whose health was at risk from lead exposure sooner. In late May, the MPCA issued a notice of violation to Gopher Resource in Eagan, Minnesota, for exceeding lead air quality standards from January through March. People living nearby weren't told about the pollution problem until July. The state pollution control agency has the authority to notify people when there's a health risk. The Environmental Protection Agency told WCCO the agency doesn't have to wait three months to do so per federal law — as the MPCA told concerned residents. People who live in the area of impact voiced their concerns at a community meeting last month, and expressed frustration about how the meeting was handled. Battery recycling business, Gopher Resource, released excessive lead emissions for three months earlier this year. The company says it became aware of the elevated readings in early 2025 and alerted the MPCA. The state health department says there's no safe level of lead exposure. "The challenging part here is that we have federal rules which require that we have three months of data to confirm that those lead levels exceeded those federal standards," MPCA Division Director Courtney Ahlers-Nelson said during a virtual meeting. "As a result, after three months of data, we must physically collect the monitoring, the materials from our monitors and then we must review that very closely." The MPCA pointed to the federal Clean Air Act, saying that's why it took so long to notify people. But it was too late for anyone to take precautions. The Environmental Protection Agency told WCCO, "The Clean Air Act does not prohibit sharing data before the three-month rolling calculation is done." The EPA did say there is a time lag to process a day's sample. Here's some of what the MPCA told WCCO in response: "It is a delicate balance of sharing information and causing undue public concern and unjustified damage to a company's reputation, and we continually review our processes within MPCA and take public feedback into account. Spikes in monitoring can sometimes be attributed to monitoring equipment malfunctions or environmental anomalies, and we need to be certain of what the data shows." It added that the information they shared was part of an active investigation and, under state law, was considered non-public. Here's the bottom line: The community has said they want the MPCA to alert them as soon as possible when there's a pollution problem suspected that can impact health — and the agency can. Already, a state lawmaker has called for the legislative auditor to look into how this was handled. The legislative auditor told WCCO the office has not yet made a decision about a special review. MPCA reports there is also an open investigation into hazardous waste management and stormwater management at Gopher Resource.