Article Search

 New Aids treatment yields promising results
    November 29 2004 at 04:06PM Get IOL on your
mobile at m.iol.co.za

Paris - French doctors have issued a highly encouraging report about a test treatment which slashed levels of the Aids virus among a small group of HIV-infected volunteers.

The prototype is called a therapeutic vaccine but this is something of a misnomer, for it is not a preventive vaccine in the conventional sense, which aims at protecting people from infection.

Instead, it is more of a treatment, seeking to reduce levels of the human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) among individuals who already infected.

Researchers recruited 18 Brazilian patients who were chronically infected with HIV and who were not receiving antiretroviral treatment.

These results suggest that dendritic-cell therapy could be a 'promising strategy'
The volunteers received a mixture of their own dendritic cells and inactivated HIV - viruses which had been killed by chemicals and thus were not infectious - in the aim of priming their immune system.

Dendritic cells are early defensive cells that rush out to meet an intruder and destroy it with enzymes.
Continues Below ↓





They then carry a chemical "tag", an antigen, on the surface of their cell that corresponds to the signature of the intruder. It is this tag which helps alert lymphocytes, the heavy artillery of the immune system.

HIV, a slippery foe, is able to sidestep the dendritic cells, although how this is done is unclear.

The goal of the experimental treatment, using the inactivated HIV, was thus to stimulate the dendritic cells so that they recognised the virus.

The next step is to widen the trial so that it includes more volunteers
The treatment was delivered in three injections, each a fortnight apart. There were no side effects.

Four months after the first dose, the viral load - the quantity of HIV in the blood - had fallen on average by 80 percent.

A year after the jabs, eight out of the 18 patients still showed viral loads that had diminished by more than 90 percent.

Four of them had a viral load of less than 1 000 particles per millilitre, "which, in theory, means they are not infective", chief researcher Jean-Marie Andrieu, a cancer professor at the Saint-Peres Biomedical Centre in Paris said.

The count of CD4 lymphocytes, which are infiltrated and destroyed by the virus, initially rose after the injections but then fell back to their baseline.

These results suggest that dendritic-cell therapy could be a "promising strategy" for treating people with HIV, says Andrieu's team.

The next step is to widen the trial so that it includes more volunteers, some of whom will not receive the treatment in order to see if it is truly as encouraging as it seems.

The study was published on Sunday in Nature Medicine, a journal of the Nature Publishing Group in London.

There are 39,4 million people with Aids or HIV around the world, according to the latest UN estimates.

There is no vaccine to prevent infection, nor any cure. Antiretroviral drugs keep the virus at bay, but they can have toxic side effects. If the patient stops taking them, the virus rebounds.

Email StoryPrint Story
BOOKMARK THIS STORY
Social bookmarking allows users to save and categorise a personal collection of bookmarks and share them with others. This is different to using your own browser bookmarks which are available using the menus within your web browser.

Use the links below to share this article on the social bookmarking site of your choice.

Read more about social bookmarking at Wikipedia - Social Bookmarking

muti



     Related Articles
More Medical stories

Watch IOLs latest videos on YouTube Join IOLs Facebook page Follow IOL on Twitter





     Online Services

Date Your Destiny
 
I'm a 24 year old man looking to meet women between the ages of 18 and 27.
 

     More Services

     More Medical Stories

     Breaking News      Most Read Stories
      Top News Stories
      Top Science Stories
      Top Reads - Yesterday



     Entertainment      Motoring
'Twenty-five years feels right in my bones'
Radio station in a knot over wedding dilemma
Driver dies in Miley Cyrus tour bus crash

     Business
Hershey may launch bid for Cadbury
Global stocks slip, dollar gains on economy fears
Difficult times bring a rise in false claims
Well-mannered Porsche - just built to race
Kia's latest baby - she's even smaller than a Picanto
Communist cousins in demand from behind the Wall
Amid Expo back in 2010 despite poor sales
Triumph recalls Sprint 1050 ST

     Travel
Berlin hipster hotel taps bygone spirit
River Plate reflect on the past
Still hope for the Garden Route
Marrying great music with fine food
Beaujolais nouveau hot in Japan
     Careers
For many, full potential goes unharnessed
Getting to grips with the transport industry
To be your own boss, believe in yourself first
Salary survey puts unstable economy into the equation
Development of child is key