A child who was born with HIV has been “functionally cured” of the virus
for the last nine years.
The South African child has been able to live for almost a decade
without taking any medication for the disease, in what is only the third
case of a child remaining in remission without detectable levels of the
HIV virus for some time.
The child was first treated back in 2007, and as part of a trial was
randomly assigned 40 weeks of antiretroviral drugs along with 143 other
babies. Once the treatment was completed, the virus remained
undetectable in the child's bloodstream and has remained so ever since. None of the other children showed the same results.
Reported at the
International Aids Society conference in
Paris, the case has been compared to that of the “Mississippi Baby”,
who back in 2010 was treated for HIV infection from birth until she was
18 months old. After a year of no medication, the HIV virus was still
undetectable. By 2014, unfortunately, tests revealed that the virus had
re-emerged.
Researchers were disappointed that the “cure” did not last in the
Mississippi Baby, so this time around they are urging significant
caution. They are not suggesting that the child is fully cured, and have
actually been able to detect the virus in a tiny reservoir within some
cells of the immune system. But because the child is not showing any
symptoms of infection with HIV, it seems the child may instead be
“functionally cured".
“Further study is needed to learn how to induce long-term HIV
remission in infected babies,” director of the National Institute of
Allergy and Infectious Diseases (NIAID), Anthony S Fauci, told
The Guardian.
“However, this new case strengthens our hope that by treating
HIV-infected children for a brief period beginning in infancy, we may be
able to spare them the burden of lifelong therapy and the health
consequences of long-term immune activation typically associated with
HIV disease.”
The doctors are still uncertain as to what is actually going on in the immune systems of these children. There are
known cases
in which some people – particularly among sex workers – are in effect
naturally immune to the virus. These people have not become infected
with the virus, despite being exposed to it on a regular basis.
The interesting thing about this latest child, however, is that it
does not share the same genetic markers as these immune people,
suggesting that there is some other form of immunity that is occurring.
The team hope that by studying the child further, they can expand their
knowledge of how to coax the body into controlling and fighting the
virus. This could lead to better drugs or even the holy grail of a
vaccine.
Source:
IFL Science
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