WHY WE NEED A CURE
Today, nearly 40 million people are living with HIV, and every day more than 4,600 people contract HIV – approximately 200 every hour.
While powerful drugs can give people with HIV a normal lifespan, they must take their medication every day for life or the virus comes roaring back.
Even with tens of billions of dollars spent on antiretroviral drugs each year, one third of all people living with HIV don't have access to treatment.
We will not end the AIDS pandemic without a cure. A cure – and an end to AIDS – would free up precious resources that could be used for other global health crises – like COVID-19.
LEADING THE WAY
In 2018 amfAR was the second largest funder of HIV cure research in the world after the U.S. National Institutes of Health, and the largest among philanthropic organizations.
In just the last five years, amfAR has awarded cure-focused grants totaling more than $50 million to support research conducted by 300 scientists working at close to 100 institutions in 16 countries.
The amfAR Institute for HIV Cure Research at UCSF has launched a complex clinical trial that aims to ‘train’ the body to control the virus without the need for anti-HIV treatment.
amfAR is also a leader in cell and gene therapy approaches to a cure and has embarked on an ambitious study that aims to deliver the gene therapy tools directly into the body through injection
We have brought in experts from outside the field of HIV cure research, such as bioengineers, and have applied new tools and technologies to cure research, including nanotechnology and protein “fingerprinting.”