AIDS antibodies are not a protective antibody, so whenever they can be found in the blood circulation, it means that a person is infected with HIV and is either a person with AIDS or a carrier of AIDS. The only people who do not produce antibodies to AIDS are those who do not have AIDS. People who have AIDS produce AIDS antibodies in their blood, and it would be an unlikely situation if a person with AIDS had no AIDS antibodies in their blood. At present, all people with AIDS have antibodies in their blood. In addition to the production of antibodies in the blood, it is likely that a person with AIDS will also be able to detect the antigenic component of HIV, or to quantify HIV RNA, because HIV is an RNA virus, which is its genetic material, and so in the case of a person with AIDS, it is possible to check for the quantification of HIV RNA in the blood as well.