Home Tags Posts tagged with "mississippi baby"

mississippi baby

0

According to new research, early HIV treatment may not cure the virus as it can rapidly form invulnerable strongholds in the body.

A baby was thought to have been cured with treatment hours after birth, but the virus emerged years later.

Monkey research, published in the journal Nature, suggests untouchable “viral reservoirs” form even before HIV can be detected in the blood.

Experts described it as a “sobering” and “striking” finding.

Reservoirs of HIV in the gut and brain tissue are the massive obstacle in the way of a cure.

Remarkable progress in developing antiretroviral drugs means HIV can be kept in check in the bloodstream and patients have a near-normal life expectancy.

But if the drugs stop, the virus will emerge from its reservoirs.

Early HIV treatment may not cure the virus as it can rapidly form invulnerable strongholds in the body

Early HIV treatment may not cure the virus as it can rapidly form invulnerable strongholds in the body

International research is focused on flushing the virus out of its reservoirs, but there had been hope that early treatment could prevent them forming in the first place.

In the study, rhesus monkeys were infected with the monkey equivalent of HIV – simian immunodeficiency virus (SIV).

The monkeys were then given antiretroviral drugs as early as three days or as late as two weeks after infection.

Treatment stopped after six months, but the virus re-emerged irrespective of how quickly antiretroviral treatment started.

It showed that viral reservoirs formed incredibly early in the course of the infection.

Dan Barouch, professor of medicine at Harvard Medical School, said: “Our data show that in this animal model, the viral reservoir was seeded substantially earlier after infection than was previously recognized.

“We found that the reservoir was established in tissues during the first few days of infection, before the virus was even detected in the blood.”

It had been believed a baby girl born with HIV had been cured after very early treatment.

The “Mississippi baby” was given HIV drugs for the first 18 months of life, but then they were stopped.

Initially the virus did not return and there was hope she had been effectively cured.

But last week it was announced that the girl, now four years old, was no longer in remission after nearly two years off the drugs.

“The unfortunate news of the virus rebounding in this child further emphasizes the need to understand the early and refractory viral reservoir that is established very quickly following HIV infection in humans,” Prof. Dan Barouch added.

Kai Deng and Robert Siliciano, of the School of Medicine at Johns Hopkins University, in Baltimore, Maryland, commented: “These data indicate that the viral reservoir could be seeded substantially earlier than previously assumed, a sobering finding that poses additional hurdles to HIV eradication efforts.

“Although early treatment may not prevent reservoir seeding, it has been consistently shown to reduce the size of the reservoir.”

They highlighted significant differences between these experiments and the human HIV infection, but concluded that the findings “suggest new approaches in addition to early treatment will be necessary to eradicate HIV infection”.

0

A Mississippi girl born with HIV and believed cured after very early treatment has now been found to still harbor the virus.

Tests last week on the 4-year-old child indicate she is no longer in remission, say doctors.

She had appeared free of HIV as recently as March, without receiving treatment for nearly two years.

The news represents a setback for hopes that very early treatment of drugs may reverse permanent infection.

The Mississippi girl had appeared free of HIV as recently as March, without receiving treatment for nearly two years

The Mississippi girl had appeared free of HIV as recently as March, without receiving treatment for nearly two years

Dr. Anthony Fauci, director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, told US media the new results were “obviously disappointing” and had possible implications on an upcoming federal HIV study.

“We’re going to take a good hard look at the study and see if it needs any modifications,” he said.

The Mississippi baby did not receive any pre-natal HIV care prior to birth.

Because of a greater risk of infection, she was started on a powerful HIV treatment just hours after labor.

She continued to receive treatment until 18 months old, when doctors could not locate her. When she returned 10 months later, no sign of infection was evident though her mother had not given her HIV medication in the interim.

Repeated tests showed no detectable HIV virus until last week. Doctors do not yet know why the virus re-emerged.

A second child with HIV was given early treatment just hours after birth in Los Angeles in April 2013.

Subsequent tests indicate she completely cleared the virus, but that child also received ongoing treatment.

Only one adult is currently believed to have been cured of HIV.

In 2007, Timothy Ray Brown received a bone marrow transplant from a donor with a rare genetic mutation that resists HIV. He has shown no signs of infection for more than five years.