So they really are trading cancer for aids. Since it self replicates, it can be spread to other people just like traditional hiv can.
You have as much chance of spreading a dead shell of HIV as you do a dead shell of an influenza virus - which is to say, no, it's not happening.
They aren't using live HIV, they are using a more or less inert and modified HIV to inject specific code into T cells.
After that process, the whole HIV thing is also completely out of the picture. It's the modified T cells (modified with certain genetic code, they don't contain anything HIV) that are then returned into the body, and those T cells replicate.
Which is what T cells do once they are activated in the body... that is, they replicate. Unless I am mistaken?
They'll eventually be "used up", leaving fewer of them remaining. Eventually, without successive treatments, "natural" T cells will make up the entirety of the "T cell population."
I guess one question: in time, as the B-cell-killing T cells drop in number and get replaced with regular T cells, do B cells make their comeback? I figure after this kind of treatment, the body still continues to produce B cells, but they are killed by the modified T cells. Eventually, as I understand it, the modified T cells drop in number, which allow the B cells to gain in number as less and less of them are killed off. Eventually, that destruction simply stops happening.
At that rate, is the immune system essentially returned to a blank baseline?
They say natural immunity is shot when the B cells are gone. But what about when they return? Are the new ones produced by the body helping by providing remembered immunity?
Is it B cells that hold onto specific proteins that act as the true mark of immunity? So, are new ones "blank" - not providing immunity against anything until specific B cells capture onto something with which to identify baddies for activation of immune response upon next encounter?
In short, does the ability to even have the typical immune system, at the minimum, return in time as the modified T cells disappear? And as the basic immune system returns, is it in that initial "infantile" state, awaiting encounters with baddies from which it can "learn immunity", but having no learned immunity at that point in time?