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An image of the HIV virus taken with transmission electron microscopy. BSIP/UIG | Getty Images A woman born with HIV has been free of the virus for 12 years, after stopping drug therapy in
early childhood, according to an article in the New Scientist. Born with the virus, she was prescribed the drugs when she was a month old and continued for the next six years. A year after
stopping the treatment, doctors could not detect the virus in her blood, and still cannot. She is not necessarily cured of the disease—the virus is in remission and could still be present in
some of her cells and could return, according to the article. But her case marks the longest a patient diagnosed with HIV as a child has been free of the disease after ending drug
treatment. (TWEET THIS) She has no particular genetic resistance, according to the article. Rather, researchers give credit to the early application of antiretroviral drugs, a class of
several drugs that are usually used in different combinations to stop the HIV virus from replicating. Asier Sáez-Cirión of the Pasteur Institute in Paris, France, will present the findings
at the annual meeting of the International AIDS Society meeting in Vancouver, Canada, on Tuesday. Read the full story in the New Scientist