Sunday, December 21, 2025
ADVT 
Health

New Setback For HIV Cure Efforts; 6 Transplants Didn't Work Like The Berlin Patient's Did

The Canadian Press, 18 Dec, 2014 10:41 AM
    Researchers are reporting another disappointment for efforts to cure infection with the AIDS virus. Six patients given blood-cell transplants similar to one that cured a man known as "the Berlin patient" have failed, and all six patients died.
     
    So far, Timothy Ray Brown, a U.S. man treated in Germany, remains the only person thought to have been cured of infection with HIV, the virus that causes AIDS.
     
    Brown also had leukemia, and had a bone marrow transplant in 2007 to treat the cancer from a donor with a gene mutation that confers natural resistance to HIV.
     
    A year later, Brown's leukemia returned but his HIV did not. He had a second transplant in March 2008 from the same donor and appears to be free of both diseases since then, said the physician who treated him, Dr. Gero Huetter of the University of Berlin.
     
    In a research letter in Thursday's New England Journal of Medicine, Huetter tells of six other patients with HIV and various blood cancers who received similar transplants. He advised on some of the cases but did not perform the transplants.
     
    One of the six patients was from Minneapolis. Two were from Germany and the others were from the Netherlands, Chile and Spain.
     
    "They all died within a couple months of the transplant," likely from their underlying disease or the risky and grueling transplant itself, Huetter said.
     
    In some, there were signs that HIV had found another way into cells to overcome the natural resistance the donors had.
     
    "That is disappointing ... we always knew that was a risk," but it should not doom efforts to cure HIV infection through other means, said Dr. Steven Deeks, an AIDS specialist at the University of California, San Francisco.
     
    He is working on other strategies to modify patients' own cells to try to defeat HIV, something less risky than the transplants attempted in these cancer patients.
     
    Earlier this year, doctors reported another setback to hopes for a cure. A Mississippi baby who doctors hoped had been cured by very aggressive, early treatment showed new signs of the disease.

    MORE Health ARTICLES

    More teenage boys seeking trust not sex: Study

    More teenage boys seeking trust not sex: Study
    Contrary to popular belief, a significant study shows that teenage boys are not looking for sex but intimate and meaningful relationships with the opposite sex.

    More teenage boys seeking trust not sex: Study

    Men out-talk women in large settings

    Men out-talk women in large settings
    Contrary to the stereotype that women talk more than men, researchers have found that there is an interplay between the context and gender and men can out-talk women in large settings, but women do the most talking in small settings.

    Men out-talk women in large settings

    Want babies? Avoid being a night owl

    Want babies? Avoid being a night owl
    For women who want to conceive, stop staying up late at night as every time you turn on the light, it slows down the production of the fertility hormone.

    Want babies? Avoid being a night owl

    High cholesterol can cause cancer

    High cholesterol can cause cancer
    Bad cholesterol has just become worse. Known to cause heart disease and hardening of the arteries, it has now been linked with a cell pathway that promotes cancer.

    High cholesterol can cause cancer

    Interruptions affect quality of work

    Interruptions affect quality of work
    Does your colleague call you out every two minutes just to see his/her picture during college days or a Facebook update even as you try to write an important report?

    Interruptions affect quality of work

    Parkinson's boosts creativity: Study

    Parkinson's boosts creativity: Study
    If you are in a creative profession, Parkinson's may be a blessing in disguise as researchers have found that patients of the nerve cells disease in the area of brain are more creative than their healthy peers.

    Parkinson's boosts creativity: Study