Impact Report 2025

amfAR Impact Report 2025
amfAR Impact Report 2025

Behind every scientific breakthrough is a belief that progress is possible—and worth fighting for. This report captures how amfAR’s investments in bold, innovative research are accelerating discovery and expanding hope for millions worldwide.

$950M

54

192

amfAR-funded studies contributed to two breakthroughs toward an HIV cure.

CONTROLLING THE VIRUS LONG-TERM
amfAR-supported researchers at the amfAR Institute for HIV Cure Research identified a combination of immunotherapies that may allow people to keep HIV suppressed long-term, bringing us closer to a future without daily treatment.

mRNA TECHNOLOGY TARGETS HIV
amfAR grantee Dr. Sharon Lewin (left) of the Doherty Institute in Melbourne, Australia, and her team have used mRNA technology to expose hidden HIV-infected cells—an essential first step toward eliminating the virus from the body.

Drastic funding cuts by the federal government that threatened to derail 40 years of progress in the fight against AIDS prompted amfAR’s Public Policy Office in Washington, D.C., to step-up advocacy efforts like never before to protect the health of people everywhere impacted by HIV and other diseases.

The office produced an unprecedented number of evidence-based reports and infographics, including a widely read analysis of how many preventable infections and deaths we might expect to see if CDC’s HIV division were abolished.

Policy staff also worked to save National Institutes of Health (NIH) funding from the chopping block—and helped convince the Senate to not only vote against NIH cuts but also increase the agency’s budget.

During a period of extensive U.S. government funding cuts to HIV research, TREAT Asia sustained its NIH-funded investigator network across 21 institutions in 12 Asia-Pacific countries.

The Bangkok, Thailand-based program also secured a five-year renewal of an NIH funded research training grant on HIV, mental health, and implementation science for early-career researchers in Cambodia, Malaysia, the Philippines, and Thailand.

TREAT Asia contributed to 33 peer-reviewed HIV research publications and 50 abstract presentations at regional and global research conferences.

Impact is measured not only in milestones reached, but in lives changed and futures made possible. Powered by more than 8,000 donors in 43 countries in 2025, amfAR will continue to advance bold science and drive progress toward a cure.

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