was diagnosed.
From you link
February 12, 2009
http://www.nejm.org/doi/full/10.1056/NEJMoa0802905#t=article"...Case Report
A 40-year-old white man with newly diagnosed acute myeloid leukemia (FAB M4 subtype, with normal cytogenetic features) presented to our hospital. HIV-1 infection had been diagnosed more than 10 years earlier, and the patient had been treated with HAART (600 mg of efavirenz, 200 mg of emtricitabine, and 300 mg of tenofovir per day) for the previous 4 years, during which no illnesses associated with the acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS) were observed. At the time that acute myeloid leukemia was diagnosed, the patient's CD4 T-cell count was 415 per cubic millimeter, and HIV-1 RNA was not detectable (stage A2 according to classification by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention). Initial treatment of the acute myeloid leukemia consisted of two courses of induction chemotherapy and one course of consolidation chemotherapy. During the first induction course, severe hepatic toxic effects developed and renal failure occurred. Consequently, HAART was discontinued, leading to a viral rebound (6.9×106 copies of HIV-1 RNA per milliliter). The therapy was resumed immediately, before a viral steady state was reached, and 3 months later, HIV-1 RNA was undetectable.
Seven months after presentation, acute myeloid leukemia relapsed, and the patient underwent allogeneic stem-cell transplantation with CD34+ peripheral-blood stem cells from an HLA-identical donor who had been screened for homozygosity for the CCR5 delta32 allele...
...Except for the presence of grade I graft-versus-host disease of the skin, which was treated by adjusting the dosage of cyclosporine, there were no serious infections or toxic effects other than grade I during the first year of follow-up. Acute myeloid leukemia relapsed 332 days after transplantation, and chimerism transiently decreased to 15%. The patient underwent reinduction therapy with cytarabine and gemtuzumab and on day 391 received a second transplant, consisting of 2.1×106 CD34+ cells per kilogram, from the same donor, after treatment with a single dose of whole-body irradiation (200 cGy). The second procedure led to a complete remission of the acute myeloid leukemia, which was still in remission at month 20 of follow-up..."