U.S. baby's HIV infection cured through very early treatment
Worldwide, about 1,000 babies are born with HIV each day. There's new reason to be
hopeful about their future
On Sunday
night, medical researchers reported that a girl born HIV-positive has been "functionally
cured." If true, and repeatable, this would be an absolutely enormous breakthrough
in AIDS research, especially for sub-Saharan
Africa, which has a high infant infection rate. Those are some
pretty important ifs, though. Here's the
story:
Two and a half years ago, a woman arrived at a rural Mississippi
hospital in labor, unaware that she was infected with HIV and reportedly having
received no prenatal care. The baby girl was born prematurely, and doctors
tested her for HIV. But before the tests even came back positive, doctors put
the baby on an aggressive
treatment of three
antiretroviral drugs, starting 30 hours after birth. After about a month, the
girl's viral levels had dropped to the level of almost being undetectable.
After 15 months the treatment became sporadic, and after 18 months, the mother
stopped bringing the girl in altogether, meaning the medication stopped.
Doctors expected the level of HIV to shoot up after the treatment ended, but
when the girl returned five months later, the virus was still undetectable.
The girl's pediatrician, Dr. Hannah Gay, roped in virologist Deborah Persaud at Johns Hopkins Children's Center,
and Persaud and Dr. Katherine Luzuriaga, an immunologist at University of
Massachusetts Medical School, performed sophisticated blood tests and
discovered trace amounts of HIV remnants but none capable of replicating. That
makes Gay's early, aggressive treatment a"functional cure," Persaud says— at least for this one toddler.
The girl isn't the first patient functionally cured of AIDS — but she's
only the second verifiable case. And the first, a middle-aged man named Timothy Brown,
became HIV-free when he received a leukemia-related bone-marrow transplant from
a donor genetically resistant to the virus. "For pediatrics, this is our
Timothy Brown," says Dr. Persaud. "It's proof of principle that we can cure HIV infection if we can replicate this case."
But there are unique aspects of this case
that other "experiments will struggle to replicate, ethically,"says James Hamblin at The Atlantic. First, "we don't have good studies on giving
infants all-out antiretroviral treatments, which can be toxic, until after we
get results from blood tests that indicate they've definitely been
infected." And there's the issue of taking the children off the medication
after 18 months, which could cause the virus to return with a vengeance if this
case was a fluke. But even though "one case is one case," the result
is "great for this kid, and a day that should live in history and inspire
progress."
And even if doctors can get this treatment
to work in other HIV-positive newborns, "one thing is certain — this
approach is not going to provide a cure for the vast majority of people with
HIV," says James Gallagher at BBC News. Once someone is fully infected, the virus hides in
the patient's DNA, making it virtually impossible to treat. One theory is that
the drugs wiped out the HIV in the girl before the virus had a chance to hide,
leading some skeptics to argue that maybe she wasn't "cured."
Still, that doesn't mean that if this
treatment is replicable, it won't have a huge impact. In the U.S. and other
developed countries, more than 98 percent of babies born to HIV-positive moms
are free of the virus, thanks to prenatal and neonatal prevention. But about
1,000 babies worldwide are born with HIV each day, primarily in sub-Saharan Africa, and more than half of those children
die within a year. "Obviously there's much testing to be done, but it's
something to feel hopeful about," says Laura Beck at Jezebel. "If the research successfully withstands
further testing — and the drugs aren't so expensive that they're practically
useless — this could be big."
The fact that this one girl appears to be
free of HIV raises another possibility: With the children who have been taking
drugs since birth, "it may be that we cured them and we don't realize
it," says Dr. Anthony Fauci, head of the National Institutes of Health. "You don't want to
recommend stopping therapy, but you do want to go back and look very
carefully," he said. "It may be that we cured them and we don't
realize it."
And as tantalizing as this possible cure
is, it's worth noting that "HIV is not the killer it used to be,"says the BBC's Gallagher. "People infected with HIV should have a near
normal lifespan if they have access to treatment." We need to put money
into providing those life-saving drugs to the people who need them, not just
toward finding a cure. But "we've started to discover things we didn't
know before and it's opening up a chink in the armor," Oxford University's
John Frater tells BBC News. "A cure is something we can no longer write off
as impossible."
No comments:
Post a Comment