Philadelphia, PA, Aug. 19, 2025 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- The Wistar Institute announces the National Institutes of Health (NIH) granted a five-year, $17 million research award to launch iCure Consortium to develop individualized โcure regimensโ for HIV. The Wistar-led, iCure Consortiumโs objective is to advance strategies to cure HIV through tailored personalized medicine.ย
โToday 38โฏmillion people still live with HIV worldwide, and 1.3โฏmillion contract the virus each year,โ said Luis J. Montaner, D.V.M., D.Phil., iCure principal investigator, executive vice president of The Wistar Institute and director of Wistar's HIV Cure and Viral Diseases Center. โFor the first time, this grant brings our best team together working towards a cure tailored to each participant by pairing the latest in neutralizing antibody and cell-therapy breakthroughs against the unique, person-specific features of HIV.โ
iCure Consortium will test a six-part, individually-tailored therapy designed to wipe out the persistent viral reservoir that remains after antiretroviral therapy in an effort to deliver durable, drug-free remission. The project combines six advanced tacticsโneutralizing antibodies, mRNA therapy, viral binders, engineered CAR-T and โNatural Killerโ (NK) cells, and precision latency โwake-upโ drugsโall designed against each patientโs unique virus.ย
โEnding HIV demands more than managementโit demands eradication,โ said DrewโฏWeissman,โฏM.D.,โฏPh.D., iCure coโprincipal investigator, 2023 Nobel Laureate and Roberts Family Professor in Vaccine Research at the Perelman School of Medicine at the University of Pennsylvania. โThis project now allows us to apply our breakthroughs in RNA therapy as part of a cure-directed strategy.โ
How iCure Works
โข Wake the latent virus
โข Map and target unique weak spots with tailored antibodies
โข Destroy infected cells using โsuperโchargedโ CARโT and NK cells
โข Enhance clearance and block relapse with bispecific binders
In the first step, researchers reactivate the virus in a sample of the participantโs blood and identify mutations that the participant has not yet developed antibodies against. They then develop a tailored antibody therapy cocktail specifically designed against these specific mutations.ย
In the next stage, researchers focus on preventing HIV from returning. To do this, they develop person-specific antibodies or small molecule binders that can act as โhoming devicesโ โ beacons that can lead immune cells to the latent virus. Then they genetically modify CAR-T cells and NK cells (immune cells that destroy viruses) to express or use these homing devices to better clear infected cells.
Finally, researchers further enhance NK cells. First, they develop stronger and more durable cells, called adaptive NK cells, by supercharging their virus-killing ability. Then, they deploy small-molecule drugs called bispecifics, which bind NK cells to the infected cells they are targeting.ย
"iCure takes full advantage of the advances made in understanding how and where HIV hides from the immune system," said Montaner. "Weโve built on our knowledge and can use that information to identify a first of its kind targeting to a personโs unique HIV features." ย
iCure furthers the research groundwork laid by the BEAT-HIV Martin Delaney Collaboratory (beat-hiv.org), a Philadelphia-based consortium of more than 95 leading HIV researchers co-led by Dr. Montaner.ย
Montaner called the NIH grant a โonce in a lifetime opportunityโ that reflects Wistarโs track record as a scientific leader in the effort to develop an HIV cure, as well as its grassroots support and collaboration with the HIV community.
โBy the end of this study we hope to have a process by which to identify the virus that we need to go after in each person and have a basis to design clinical trials choosing the best of these strategies to move forward,โ said Montaner.
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Other institutions participating in this study include Johns Hopkins Medicine and iCure co-principal investigator Robert Siliciano, M.D.,โฏPh.D., the University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia FIGHT, the Ragon Institute at Harvard University, George Washington University, Duke University, and Massachusetts Institute of Technology. The iCure program is funded by the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, part of NIH, under award number UM1AI191272.
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The Wistar Institute is an international leader in biomedical research with special expertise in cancer research and vaccine development. Founded in 1892 as the first independent nonprofit biomedical research institute in the United States, Wistar has held the prestigious Cancer Center designation from the National Cancer Institute since 1972. The Institute works actively to ensure that research advances move from the laboratory to the clinic as quickly as possible. wistar.org.

Darien Sutton The Wistar Institute 215-870-2048 dsutton@wistar.org
