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Second HIV patient cleared of AIDS-causing virus

  • March 05, 2019

Reseachers have announced that a man infected with the HIV virus, which causes AIDS, is in sustained remission following a bone marrow transplant from an HIV-resistant donor. This makes the man, known as the “London patient,” the second person ever to have been cleared of the fatal virus that affects some 37 million people worldwide.

The treatment and result was published in the international science journal Nature and is expected to be officially announced at a medical conference in Seattle on Tuesday.

The scientists used the same method that was successfully applied to an HIV-positive patient in Berlin in 2007.

“By achieving remission in a second patient using a similar approach, we have shown that the Berlin patient was not an anomaly,” lead researcher Ravindra Gupta said.

Rare genetic mutation

In both cases, the patients received bone marrow stem cells from donors who had genetic mutations to the HIV receptor, known as CCR5, that made them resistant to the virus. Replacing the infected patients’ cells with the mutated ones seems to keep HIV from coming back after the treatment.

The “London patient” was diagnosed with HIV in 2003 and has been on antiretroviral therapy (ARV) since 2012, which suppresses the virus but does not eliminate it. He received the bone marrow transplant in 2016 and continued on ARV 16 more months before stopping the treatment. He has shown no signs of the virus for 19 months now.

‘Functionally cured’

“There is no virus there that we can measure. We can’t detect anything,” Gupta said. However, he cautioned that, “It’s too early to say he’s cured,” instead describing the patient as “functionally cured” and “in remission.”

The researcher said  this second instance of successfully clearing a patient of HIV would help narrow the range of treatment strategies, but he emphasized that bone marrow transplants, which are dangerous, painful and and expensive, would not be a viable option for HIV treatment.  

Only 59 percent of people living with HIV worldwide receive ARV. Some one million individuals die annually from HIV-related causes, and AIDS has killed around 35 million since it began in the 1980s.

The “London patient” requested anonymity from his medical team.

  • Former South African president Thabo Mbeki (Getty Images/AFP/G. Khan)

    Many different approaches to tackling HIV/AIDS in Africa

    Deadly denialism

    Former South African president Thabo Mbeki (1999 – 2008) went down in history as the foremost African denier of AIDS. Against all scientific evidence he maintained that HIV did not cause AIDS. He instructed his health officials to combat the disease with herbal remedies. Experts believe his denialism cost up to 300,000 lives. Some have called for Mbeki to be tried for crimes against humanity.

  • Gambia's former President Yahya Jammeh (picture alliance/AP photo)

    Many different approaches to tackling HIV/AIDS in Africa

    A president as traditional healer

    In 2007 former Gambian president Yahya Jammeh (1996 – 2017) forced AIDS patients to undergo a cure that he had personally developed. It turned out to be a concoction based on herbs; an unknown number of people died. Jammeh, who claimed that he had mystic powers, is the first African head of state to be tried for violating the rights of HIV-positive people.

  • Former South African President Jacob Zuma (Reuters/N. Bothma)

    Many different approaches to tackling HIV/AIDS in Africa

    ‘Take a shower’

    Another former South African head of state to make headlines for an unconventional take on AIDS was Jacob Zuma (2009 – 2018). After being charged with raping an HIV-positive woman in 2006, Zuma said he was not at risk of infection, despite not using a condom, because he had “taken a shower afterwards.” In 2010 he disclosed the negative results of his AIDS test, to fight the stigma, he said.

  • Ugandan President Yoweri Museveni waving (picture alliance/dpa/Langsdon)

    Many different approaches to tackling HIV/AIDS in Africa

    No condoms?

    Uganda’s President Yoweri Museveni took his time before joining the fight against the epidemic. As late as 2004, during an international AIDS conference in Thailand, he downplayed the effectiveness of condoms, alleging, among other things, that they ran counter to some African sexual practices. “We don’t think we can become universally condomised,” he said. His remarks were met with laughter.

  • Former President Robert Mugabe of Zimbabwe (picture alliance/AP/T Mukwazhi)

    Many different approaches to tackling HIV/AIDS in Africa

    A tax to fund treatment

    Some action taken by African heads of state to fight the scourge did not go down well at home. A tax introduced in 1999 by Zimbabwe’s President Robert Mugabe (1987-20017) to help orphans and sufferers met with resistance. It is still in place today. In 2004 Mugabe admitted that his own family had been affected by AIDS. He said the disease was “one of the greatest challenges facing our nation.”

  • Former Zambian president Kenneth Kaunda (picture-alliance/AP Photo/M. Mwape)

    Many different approaches to tackling HIV/AIDS in Africa

    A shining example

    Fear of economic repercussions affecting, for example, tourism, is one reason why African leaders have been reluctant to acknowledge the threat. But President Kenneth Kaunda of Zambia (1964-1991) announced as early as 1987 that one of his sons had died of AIDS. In 2002 he was the first African leader to take an AIDS test. He still fights against AIDS today.

  • Zambian President Edgar Lungu (Imago/Xinhua)

    Many different approaches to tackling HIV/AIDS in Africa

    Bid to make tests compulsory

    The fight against AIDS by Kaunda’s successor Edgar Lungu met with some hitches when he tried to make AIDS-testing compulsory in Zambia. Lungu said in 2016 that the policy was non-negotiable. But a huge outcry in Zambia and abroad forced him to backpedal especially as the World Health Organization made clear that compulsion encourages the stigmatization of HIV-positive people.

  • Former Botswanan president Festus Mogae (picture-alliance/ dpa)

    Many different approaches to tackling HIV/AIDS in Africa

    Championing an HIV-free Africa

    After leaving office, Festus Mogae, former president of Botswana (1998-2008), launched Champions for an AIDS-Free Generation, which brings together a number of former African presidents and other influential personalities eager to help fight the scourge. They hope that their experience and influence will enable them to exert pressure on governments and partners to invest in AIDS prevention.

    Author: Cristina Krippahl


cmb/rt (Reuters, AFP)

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Article source: https://www.dw.com/en/second-hiv-patient-cleared-of-aids-causing-virus/a-47771220?maca=en-rss-en-all-1573-rdf

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