Two men 'cleared' of HIV after bone marrow transplants in an Australian first that has sparked hope for eradicating the deadly virus that causes AIDS
Two men 'cleared' of HIV after bone marrow transplants in an
Australian first that has sparked hope for eradicating the deadly virus
that causes AIDS.
- Two HIV-positive men were treated at Sydney's St Vincent Hospital
- They had bone marrow transplants and their HIV is now undetectable
- Professor David Cooper said these are the first successful cases of HIV being cleared in Australia
- Both patients remain on antiretroviral therapy to prevent HIV coming back. Two men who were HIV-positive appear
to be virus-free after bone marrow transplants, marking the first
successful cases of HIV being cleared in Australia.
Both men now register undetectable levels of the virus after treatment
in Sydney, according to the University of NSW's Kirby Institute
director, Professor David Cooper.
In
a significant breakthrough for researchers, one of the patients cleared
the virus without donor marrow containing a rare gene mutation that
protects against HIV.
The
human immunodeficiency virus, which causes AIDS, became undetectable in
both patients about three years after their transplants, Prof Cooper
said.
The men, who were
treated at Sydney's St Vincent's Hospital, in partnership with the Kirby
Institute, remain on antiretroviral therapy.
'We're
so pleased that both patients are doing reasonably well years after the
treatment for their cancers and remain free of both the original cancer
and the HIV virus,' he said.
Professor David Cooper carried out the ground-breaking research at Sydney's St Vincent's Hospital
The work was presented on Saturday at
the Towards an HIV Cure Symposium, which is part of the 20th
International AIDS Conference in Melbourne, which opens on Sunday.
The
patients' success echoes that of American man Timothy Ray Brown, the
famous Berlin patient, who has shown no signs of virus resurgence since
he received a bone marrow transplant from a donor with a rare gene
mutation conferring resistance to HIV.
The 20th International AIDS Conference is set to begin in Melbourne on Sunday
This rare gene mutation, called CCR5 delta32, makes stem cells naturally resistant to the virus.
It is found in less than one per cent of Caucasians, mostly northern Europeans.
In
Boston, two other patients underwent similar bone marrow transplants in
2012 but the transplanted cells did not contain the rare gene mutation.
In both cases, the virus returned after antiretroviral treatment was stopped.
The first Sydney patient underwent a bone marrow transplant in 2010 for non-Hodgkin lymphoma. His donor had the mutation.
However,
the second man who underwent a procedure in 2011 for acute myeloid
leukaemia was matched with a donor that did not have it.
Both men no longer showed any trace of the virus after a series of tests, Prof Cooper said.
'This is another example of where the transplant can drive the amount of virus to levels that we simply cannot detect,' he said.
Timothy Ray Brown, known as the 'Berlin Patient', is currently the only person to have been cured of AIDS.
'But if we stopped the antiretroviral therapy, there would be a very strong chance that it would come back.
'We're trying to understand this strong anti-HIV effect and understand where the virus might be hiding.'
The Sydney cases could lead to new approaches to treating, and ultimately eradicating HIV, he said.
'Cure
research is looking for a way to move forward and my view is that this
is a very important clue, that an immune response produced by bone
marrow transplantation has such a strong anti-HIV effect,' Prof Cooper
said.
'We're going to use
this as a model for cure research and see if we can develop some
therapies that mimic what were doing with bone marrow transplantation.'
The
stem cell transplant procedure, however, is not a practical strategy
for the majority of HIV patients, and the risk of mortality is up to 10
per cent, Prof Cooper says.
'For
someone with HIV, you certainly would not transplant them when they've
got an almost normal lifespan with antiretroviral therapy.'
The men, who were treated at Sydney's St Vincent's Hospital, in
partnership with the Kirby Institute, remain on antiretroviral therapy.
Between two and five HIV positive patients required bone marrow transplants for cancer each year in Australia, he said.
'It is very difficult to find a match for bone marrow donors.'
And
when a donor and recipient match was found, the chances of then having
the one per cent of donors who had the protective gene was going to be
very small, he said.
Prof
Cooper said there was a movement in the HIV cure community to try to
identify these donors with the mutation and ask them to volunteer for
bone marrow transplants for HIV-positive people.
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