Julio Montaner
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Julio S. G. Montaner, (born April 13, 1956) is an Argentine-Canadian physician, professor and researcher. He is the director of the British Columbia Centre for Excellence in HIV/AIDS, the chair in AIDS Research and head of the Division of AIDS in the Faculty of Medicine at the
University of British Columbia The University of British Columbia (UBC) is a public research university with campuses near Vancouver and in Kelowna, British Columbia. Established in 1908, it is British Columbia's oldest university. The university ranks among the top thre ...
and the past-president of the
International AIDS Society The International AIDS Society (IAS) is the world's largest association of HIV/AIDS professionals, with 11,600 members from over 170 countries , including clinicians, people living with HIV, service providers, policy makers and others. It aims to ...
. He is also the director of the John Ruedy Immunodeficiency Clinic, and the Physician Program Director for HIV/AIDS PHC. He is known for his work on
HAART The management of HIV/AIDS normally includes the use of multiple antiretroviral drugs as a strategy to control HIV infection. There are several classes of antiretroviral agents that act on different stages of the HIV life-cycle. The use of multip ...
(Highly Active Antiretroviral Therapy), a role in the discovery of triple therapy as an effective treatment for HIV in the late 1990s, and a role in advocating the "Treatment as Prevention" Strategy in the mid-2000s, led by Myron Cohen of the HPTN 052 trial.


Early life and career

Montaner was born in Buenos Aires, Argentina in 1956, the son of Julio Gonzalez Montaner, a pulmonary specialist. His father initially doubted that Montaner would follow in his footsteps, but after entering medical school, he developed a passion for medicine. He received an M.D. with Honours from the
University of Buenos Aires The University of Buenos Aires ( es, Universidad de Buenos Aires, UBA) is a public research university in Buenos Aires, Argentina. Established in 1821, it is the premier institution of higher learning in the country and one of the most prestigi ...
in Argentina in 1979. Montaner originally planned on following his father's career in pulmonary medicine, and accepted an invitation to do a one-year post-doctoral fellowship at the University of British Columbia in 1981 in the Pulmonary Research Laboratory, which was directed at the time by
James C. Hogg James C. Hogg (born December 3, 1935) is a Canadian physician and pulmonary pathologist. Hogg has been recognized for his research into Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease. He received the Canada Gairdner Wightman Award in 2013. He became an ...
. His initial research focused on animal models of acute lung injury. Montaner initially planned on returning to Argentina after completing his fellowship. After meeting his future wife at St. Paul's Hospital in the early 1980s, he decided to remain in Canada. He completed his residency at the University of British Columbia in the Department of Internal Medicine and Respiratory Medicine and was appointed Chief Resident for the Department of Medicine from 1986 to 1987. Montaner then joined the faculty at St. Paul's Hospital/University of British Columbia in
Vancouver Vancouver ( ) is a major city in western Canada, located in the Lower Mainland region of British Columbia. As the List of cities in British Columbia, most populous city in the province, the 2021 Canadian census recorded 662,248 people in the ...
, British Columbia, in 1987. John Ruedy, at the time the head of the Department of Medicine at St. Paul's Hospital, invited him to run the new HIV department that was being established in response to the emerging AIDS crisis. Ruedy appointed him as the director of the AIDS Research Program and the Infectious Disease Clinic in 1989. Montaner's shift to HIV research began when he encountered AIDS patients with ''Pneumocystis carinii'' pneumonia while completing his training in pulmonary medicine. He encountered the opportunity to test AZT monotherapy for HIV as part of his work on PCP, which sparked an interest in HIV research. Montaner was the only member of the HIV department at St. Paul's Hospital when it was first founded. He became the founding co-director of the Canadian HIV Trials Network in 1990 with Martin Schechter. In 1992, he was joined by Michael O’Shaughnessy to found the B.C. Centre for Excellence in HIV/AIDS in 1992. Montaner was appointed a National Health Research Scholar of Canada (NHRDP) from 1988 to 1998. In 1996, Montaner presented the results of his pioneering research on triple therapy to treat HIV infections at the XI International AIDS Conference in Vancouver, creating new standard for HIV drug therapy. In 1997, he was appointed a Professor of Medicine at the University of British Columbia. Montaner served as the president of the International AIDS Society from 2008 to 2010, and as of 2013, continues to serve as an elected member of the Council of the International AIDS Society after his term as president ended. As of 2013, he also serves as the director of clinical activities at the BC Centre of Excellence in HIV/AIDS, a professor of medicine at UBC, physician program director for HIV/AIDS PHC and continues to serve as the director of the John Ruedy Immunodeficiency Clinic at St. Paul's Hospital. Montaner is the editor of the B.C. Centre Therapeutic Guidelines and oversees its Drug Distribution Program. In 2002, he was awarded the $1 million Distinguished Researcher Award in HIV.1 He was awarded the Avant-Garde Award of $2.5 million over 5 years, from the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the
National Institutes of Health The National Institutes of Health, commonly referred to as NIH (with each letter pronounced individually), is the primary agency of the United States government responsible for biomedical and public health research. It was founded in the late ...
, in support of the "Seek and Treat for Optimal Outcomes and Prevention in HIV & AIDS in IDU (STOP HIV/AIDS)" strategy of treatment as prevention in 2010.


Research


Respiratory medicine research

As a post-doctoral fellow and resident, Montaner's research was initially focused on respiratory medicine. He participated in and led a series of studies on the role of adjunctive corticosteroids in treating
Pneumocystis carinii pneumonia ''Pneumocystis'' pneumonia (PCP), also known as ''Pneumocystis jirovecii'' pneumonia (PJP), is a form of pneumonia that is caused by the yeast-like fungus ''Pneumocystis jirovecii''. ''Pneumocystis'' specimens are commonly found in the lungs of ...
(PCP) patients. PCP is an opportunistic infection commonly found in AIDS-stage HIV positive patients and was one of the major killers of HIV-positive patients at that time. Montaner and his colleagues found that oral corticosteroid treatment administered early to AIDS patients experiencing their first moderate to severe ''P. carinii'' pneumonia episode prevented early deterioration and improved oxygen saturation, a key indicator of survival in PCP patients. Montaner and the study's co-authors found that only 5.6% of the patients given
Prednisone Prednisone is a glucocorticoid medication mostly used to suppress the immune system and decrease inflammation in conditions such as asthma, COPD, and rheumatologic diseases. It is also used to treat high blood calcium due to cancer and ad ...
(a corticosteroid) reached the study-end point of a 10% decrease in oxygen saturation compared to 42.1% of the patients on the placebo drug. The Prednisone group also demonstrated increased long-term exercise tolerance, another indicator of long-term survival. As a result of this study, Montaner was one of the first doctors to implement the strategy of treating PCP patients with steroids. The approach of treating immunosuppressed patients with steroids, which are anti-inflammatory drugs, was unorthodox at the time but Montaner pursued this strategy as he "believed IVwas a matter of immune dysregulation as much as suppression.". Montaner and his colleagues published their findings in Chest in 1989 and the Annals of Internal Medicine in 1990. Montaner's research and similar findings from other pulmonary researchers at the time led to the release of a consensus statement from a NIH-University of California Expert Panel recommending the treatment of HIV-positive PCP patients with corticosteroids.


HIV/AIDS research

Montaner has authored over 450 publications on HIV/AIDS dating back to the late 1980s. After he was appointed the director of the AIDS Research Program and the Immunodeficiency Clinic at St. Paul's Hospital; Montaner focused his research on antiretroviral therapy and HIV treatment regimes.


Triple therapy (HAART)

His research in the mid-1990s contributed to the development and implementation of anti-HIV triple-drug therapy (HAART). At the XI International AIDS Society-USA (IAS-USA) Conference in 1996, Montaner presented the findings of the INCAS group, which consisted of HIV-positive cohorts in Italy, Netherlands, Canada, Australia and the United States. The INCAS group's initial findings were that treating HIV-1 positive adults with a combination of three drugs (
nevirapine Nevirapine (NVP), sold under the brand name Viramune among others, is a medication used to treat and prevent HIV/AIDS, specifically HIV-1. It is generally recommended for use with other antiretroviral medications. It may be used to prevent mothe ...
,
didanosine Didanosine (ddI, DDI), sold under the brand name Videx, is a medication used to treat HIV/AIDS. It is used in combination with other medications as part of highly active antiretroviral therapy (HAART). It is of the reverse-transcriptase inhibitor ...
and
zidovudine Zidovudine (ZDV), also known as azidothymidine (AZT), is an antiretroviral medication used to prevent and treat HIV/AIDS. It is generally recommended for use in combination with other antiretrovirals. It may be used to prevent mother-to-child ...
) resulted in a greater decrease in viral load than a combination of two drugs. He also announced an association between decreased viral load and improved outcomes, as well as decreased mortality. The study also reported a decrease in viral load of less than 20 HIV RNA copies per mL of blood in some patients in the triple therapy group. The study was conducted as a 52-week double-blind study on 151 antiretroviral-naïve HIV-positive patients that had never had a record of an AIDS-defining condition. This discovery was adopted as part of the antiretroviral treatment guidelines by the IAS and is the basis of the modern-day
HAART The management of HIV/AIDS normally includes the use of multiple antiretroviral drugs as a strategy to control HIV infection. There are several classes of antiretroviral agents that act on different stages of the HIV life-cycle. The use of multip ...
treatment regimen. Montaner said about the discovery: "The sense of excitement was absolutely palpable. It was incredible. Within months, mortality, death rates and progression to AIDS among people taking triple therapy was down to nothing. This happened in Vancouver." In 1998, the results of the INCAS randomized double-blind clinical trial examining a combination of Nevirapine, Didanosine and Zidovudine as treatment for HIV-positive patients was published in the '' Journal of the American Medical Association''. This paper reported the data initially presented by Montaner and his colleagues at the XI IAS Conference. The paper demonstrated their findings of a greater decrease in plasma HIV-1 RNA (an indicator of HIV viral load) in patients treated with the combination of the three drugs as opposed to patients treated with a regimen of only two of the drugs, which was the standard of care in the mid 1990s. The percentage of patients in the triple drug therapy group with a viral load below 20 copies per mL after 52 weeks of treatment was 52%, compared to 12% for patients in the zidovudine plus didanosine group and 0% for the zidovudine plus nevirapine group (P < 0.01). The trial demonstrated that a triple therapy regimen of nevirapine, didanosine and zidovudine given as a combination reduces viral load among HIV-1 positive adults significantly more than a combination of two of the drugs.


Drug resistance

Montaner and his colleagues at the BC-CfE have conducted research on the development of
drug resistance Drug resistance is the reduction in effectiveness of a medication such as an antimicrobial or an antineoplastic in treating a disease or condition. The term is used in the context of resistance that pathogens or cancers have "acquired", that is ...
to triple-drug therapy cocktails. In 2005, Montaner and his colleagues published a study in ''
The Journal of Infectious Diseases ''The Journal of Infectious Diseases'' is a peer-reviewed biweekly medical journal published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the Infectious Diseases Society of America. It covers research on the pathogenesis, diagnosis, and treatment o ...
'' characterizing the development of antiretroviral resistance among a cohort of 1191 initially antiretroviral-naïve HIV positive British Columbians. The results indicated that a high baseline plasma viral load, poor adherence and the inclusion of non-nucleoside reverse-transcriptase inhibitors ( NNRTIs) in the initial drug cocktail were all predictors of development of antiretroviral resistance. Montaner was coauthor on Robert Hogg's paper demonstrating that resistance to NNRTIs resulted in greater mortality than the development of resistance to protease inhibitors. Montaner and the BC-CfE continue to focus research efforts on multi-drug resistance and its predictors.


Treatment as prevention strategy (TasP)

Montaner was also central in the creation and implementation of the Treatment as Prevention strategy (TasP). The Treatment as Prevention strategy is based on the premise that administering HAART to all medically eligible HIV positive individuals will decrease transmission rates. In 2006, Montaner, Robert Hogg, and colleagues at the B.C. Centre for Excellence in HIV/AIDS published an article in ''
The Lancet ''The Lancet'' is a weekly peer-reviewed general medical journal and one of the oldest of its kind. It is also the world's highest-impact academic journal. It was founded in England in 1823. The journal publishes original research articles, ...
'' promoting early and global access to HAART treatment as a strategy not just to decrease mortality and progression to AIDS, but also as a method of reducing HIV transmission. HAART treatment has been found to reduce viral load to undetectable levels in the female genital tract, semen and blood. Montaner et al. suggested that this would therefore decrease transmission risk, based on studies of significant decreases in mother-to-child transmission with the use of HAART. Montaner and his colleagues presented evidence from multiple clinical trials and cohort studies showing reduction in HIV transmission among sero-discordant couples with the use of HAART, as well as regional negative correlations between increased HAART access and use and HIV transmission rates. Based on data from Taiwan and British Columbia, Montaner and his colleagues posited that approximately a 50% reduction in HIV transmission could be attributed to widespread HAART adherence. This suggested that Treatment as Prevention was a cost-effective strategy, based on an estimated lifetime treatment cost of $241 000 in 2001 in the United States for a new HIV infection. Montaner and his colleagues created a hypothetical population-based model that demonstrated that with worldwide access to HAART, the short-term cost would be much less compared to the long-term cost of treating new infections as a result of the decrease in transmission rate. Their population-based model demonstrated, in an optimistic prediction, that HIV global prevalence could be reduced by a factor of 70 over 45 years. Montaner's research also addressed concerns of HIV drug resistance evolving from increased and early access to HAART by citing evidence from studies supporting the idea that fears of drug resistance should not prevent widespread HAART distribution. In a 2011 article published in Lancet, Montaner stated that "The evidence is in: treatment is prevention. Treatment dramatically prevents morbidity and mortality, HIV transmission, and tuberculosis. Furthermore, treatment prevents HIV transmission in vertical, sexual, and injection drug use settings; indeed, a very welcome double hat-trick. The challenge remains to optimise the impact of this valuable intervention. Failure to do so is not an option." Montaner cited the findings of the landmark study HPTN 052, that HAART use can reduce HIV transmission by 96% in sero-discordant heterosexual couples, as compelling evidence for implementing the "Treatment as Prevention" Strategy. These findings supported the BC-CfE's finding of a negative correlation between an increased number of HIV positive individuals on HAART and new cases of HIV. These results were from a population-based study in B.C. that aimed to estimate the correlation between new HIV infections, HAART coverage and HIV-1 plasma viral load published in Lancet in 2010. The 2010 Lancet study demonstrated a population-level association between increased HAART coverage and decreased viral load and new HIV infections, which supported the idea of decreased HIV transmission as a secondary benefit of expanding HAART coverage. Currently, in British Columbia, Montaner has a role in the largely defunct Seek and Treat for Optimal Prevention of HIV/AIDS (STOP HIV/AIDS) program with assistance from a paltry $2.5 million grant from the US National Institute of Drug Abuse of the NIH. This program is based on Cohen's HPTN 052 research supporting Treatment as Prevention and aims to expand access to HAART among hard-to-reach and vulnerable populations in the Downtown East-Side area of Vancouver. The goal of the program is to decrease HIV/AIDS-related mortality in British Columbia and evaluate any corresponding decrease in new HIV cases in B.C. In data published in 2010, Montaner and the BC-CfE reported a reduction of approximately 65% in new HIV cases in B.C.


Safe injection sites and harm reduction

Montaner is a proponent of harm reduction policy and played a minor role for his colleagues at the BC-CfE, was involved in founding and supporting the
Insite Insite is the first legal supervised drug injection site in North America, located at 139 East Hastings Street, in the Downtown Eastside (DTES) neighbourhood of Vancouver, British Columbia. The DTES had 4700 chronic drug users in 2000 and h ...
Safe Injection facility in Vancouver's Downtown East-Side. Montaner has co-authored many studies on the effect of safe injection facilities on drug overdoses and deaths, HIV and Hepatitis C infections and the spread of other blood-borne pathogens. The research of Montaner and his colleagues was instrumental in the Supreme Court of Canada's 2011 ruling in '' Canada (AG) v PHS Community Services Society'', which allowed Insite's exemption status to continue.


Current research interests

Montaner's current major research interests are
harm reduction Harm reduction, or harm minimization, refers to a range of public health policies designed to lessen the negative social and/or physical consequences associated with various human behaviors, both legal and illegal. Harm reduction is used to d ...
(including safe injection sites and needle exchange programs), treating hard-to-reach HIV-positive populations, and developing new antiretrovirals. He is being sued by former colleagues for blocking access to data mutually collected. He is also focusing on optimizing HAART treatment and authoring further studies on the "Treatment as Prevention" strategy. Since the last 2000s, he has shifted the focus of the BC-CfE to focus on HAART toxicity, multi-drug resistance and antiretroviral adherence. He received a grant of $2.5 million over 5 years in 2008 from the National Institute on Drug Abuse to support his "Seek and Treat for Optimal Outcomes and Prevention in HIV & AIDS in IDU (STOP HIV/AIDS)" project. He also is working on improving the engagement and treatment of hard-to-reach or rural HIV positive populations as part of a $48 million grant from the Ministry of Health of the Province of British Columbia.


Controversy


Early career controversy and HIV/AIDS stigma

Early in his career, Montaner and his colleagues faced extensive stigma during the early days shortly after the B.C. Centre for Excellence and the Canadian HIV Trials Network were founded. There were many attempts to divert funding from HIV research at the time and he encountered significant resistance from the provincial government of British Columbia due to the stigma surrounding HIV. Montaner started his career at a time where very little was known about HIV and how it was spread, and there was much resistance from some of the staff and medical community at St. Paul's Hospital about their developing reputation as a center for HIV/AIDS in the early 1990s.


The Tiko Kerr Case

In 2005, Montaner was central in the battle to obtain experimental drugs to treat Vancouver artist and activist Tiko Kerr. Kerr was diagnosed with HIV in the 1980s and over time, had developed resistance to every HIV drug on the market due to being treated with single-drug therapy in the early 1990s before the discovery of triple-drug therapy. Montaner pressured Health Canada to allow Kerr and five other patients with drug-resistant HIV to receive two experimental HIV drugs, TMC114 and TMC125.28 The drugs had not yet been released to market in Canada due to concerns about drug toxicity. Montaner argued for access to the drugs under ground of compassionate use. Health Canada initially denied the appeal, but after public pressure from Montaner and other HIV activists, granted permission for the use of the drugs in a clinical trial. Kerr and 3 others were started on the two drugs, as two of the men originally in need of the drugs had died by the time permission was granted by Health Canada. Kerr credits Montaner with saving his life due to his efforts in obtaining the drugs. In 2009, 4 years after starting the clinical trial, Kerr's CD4+ count has significantly improved and his viral load has fallen, and he appears in general good health, indicating that the drugs are working.


Controversy surrounding the treatment as prevention strategy

Currently, British Columbia is Canada's only province that adopts the "Treatment as Prevention" strategy to combat HIV/AIDS. Despite evidence from the B.C. Centre for Excellence indicating a reduction in transmission of HIV, increased survival and a reduction of viral load to an undetectable level, the "Treatment as Prevention" strategy has not been implemented as a federal policy by the Canadian government. Under Montaner's leadership, the Center for Disease Control and Prevention in China and the B.C. Centre for Excellence in HIV/AIDS created a new Fellowship program in 2013 to help incorporate the "Treatment as Prevention Strategy" as China's national response to HIV/AIDS. Brazil, Australia, the United States and France have also implemented "Treatment as Prevention" as a strategy for fighting HIV/AIDS. The World Health Organization has also incorporated the strategy into its Global HIV Treatment Guidelines. The Government of Canada has not yet federally endorsed the program. The Public Health Agency of Canada (PHAC) released a statement saying more evaluation is needed to determine the feasibility, long-term sustainability, safety and effectiveness of new prevention technologies such as "Treatment as Prevention" in Canada and globally" and indicated that it is monitoring the results of pilot studies and randomized control trials. The PHAC states that B.C.’s concurrent implementation of a comprehensive strategy to reduce HIV infections has made it difficult to isolate whether the "Treatment as Prevention" strategy is responsible for the decrease in HIV infections. Montaner stated his belief that the stigmas associates with the transmission routes of HIV are responsible for the Canadian government's hesitancy to embrace the strategy in an interview with the Globe and Mail in 2012. He is outspoken about his opinion of the Government of Canada's current stance on funding HIV/AIDS and their focus on criminalizing injecting drug users. He referred to his frustration with the federal government's hesitancy to adopt the Treatment as Prevention strategy in a 2012 interview with Positive Live, stating "Canada has this amazing made-in-Canada strategy that has now been recognized by
Science Science is a systematic endeavor that Scientific method, builds and organizes knowledge in the form of Testability, testable explanations and predictions about the universe. Science may be as old as the human species, and some of the earli ...
as the number one scientific breakthrough for 2011. The New York Times has written about it. You name it. It’s all over the place. And I cannot get five minutes audience with the federal government to say – you know how come it‘s so easy to have a national strategy about childhood obesity, prostate cancer, breast cancer – and AIDS, we have a made-in-Canada strategy that can fix it that cannot be sorted out."


Honours and recognition

* 2009 – inducted in the Royal Society of Canada – The Academies of Arts, Humanities and Sciences (RSC). * 2010 –
Order of British Columbia The Order of British Columbia (french: Ordre de la Colombie-Britannique) is a civilian honour for merit in the Canadian province of British Columbia. Instituted in 1989 by Lieutenant Governor David Lam, on the advice of the Cabinet under Premier ...
in part for his work developing the Treatment as Prevention strategy, resulting in a decrease in
HIV/AIDS Human immunodeficiency virus infection and acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (HIV/AIDS) is a spectrum of conditions caused by infection with the human immunodeficiency virus (HIV), a retrovirus. Following initial infection an individual ...
infections and mortality. * 2010 – Doctor of Science Honoris causa from
Simon Fraser University Simon Fraser University (SFU) is a public research university in British Columbia, Canada, with three campuses, all in Greater Vancouver: Burnaby (main campus), Surrey, and Vancouver. The main Burnaby campus on Burnaby Mountain, located ...
. * 2010 –
Albert Einstein World Award of Science The Albert Einstein World Award for Science is an annual award given by the World Cultural Council "as a means of recognition and encouragement for scientific and technological research and development", with special consideration for researches ...
, awarded as "means of recognition to those persons who have accomplished scientific and technological achievements which have brought progress to science and benefit to mankind" for his leadership and development of novel HIV treatment strategies with worldwide impact. * 2010 – Inaugural Aubrey J. Tingle Prize from the Michael Smith Foundation for Health Research for his contributions to advances in treatment and care of people living with HIV. * 2010 – Prix Galien Research Award for his role in altering the management of HIV positive patients and for his discovery leading to the introduction of HAART triple therapy as the standard of care for HIV/AIDS. * 2011 – UBC Jacob Biely Prize awarded "yearly to an active faculty member for a distinguished record of research publication" for his extensive research in HIV/AIDS. * 2012 – Grand Decoration of Honour for Services to the Republic of Austria from the president of Austria for his HIV/AIDS research and development of novel treatment strategies. * 2012 –
Queen Elizabeth II Diamond Jubilee Medal The Queen Elizabeth II Diamond Jubilee Medal (french: Médaille du jubilé de diamant de la reine Elizabeth II) or The Queen's Diamond Jubilee Medal was a commemorative medal created in 2012 to mark the 60th anniversary of Queen Elizabeth II's ...
for his work in groundbreaking HIV Research and as "recognition for his outstanding commitment and contributions to end the epidemic and to improve the lives of people living with and affected by HIV, both in Canada and internationally." (Albert McNutt, chair of the Canadian AIDS Society board of directors). * 2013 – HRF Medal of Honour for his leadership and commitment to advancing HIV/AIDS treatment worldwide and improving the lives of HIV positive individuals. * 2013 – Frederic Newton Gibson (F.N.G.) Star presented annually by the Canadian Medical Association to "individuals who have made outstanding contributions to science, the fine arts or literature, or by achievements in serving humanity under conditions calling for courage or the endurance of hardship in the promotion of health or the saving of life, in advancing the humanitarian or cultural life of his or her community or in improving medical service in Canada" for creating a global prototype for HIV/AIDS control. * 2014 –
Order of Canada The Order of Canada (french: Ordre du Canada; abbreviated as OC) is a Canadian state order and the second-highest honour for merit in the system of orders, decorations, and medals of Canada, after the Order of Merit. To coincide with the cen ...
—Officer of the Order * 2015 – Canadian Medical Hall of Fame


Further reading


Articles on treatment as prevention

* *

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Articles on the discovery of the anti-HIV drug triple therapy

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References

{{DEFAULTSORT:Montaner, Julio 1956 births Albert Einstein World Award of Science Laureates Fellows of the Royal Society of Canada Living people HIV/AIDS researchers Officers of the Order of Canada University of Buenos Aires alumni Academic staff of the University of British Columbia