The Prague Post - Seventh person likely 'cured' of HIV, doctors announce

EUR -
AED 4.282476
AFN 76.952508
ALL 96.861296
AMD 446.302407
ANG 2.087028
AOA 1069.175293
ARS 1718.033975
AUD 1.770184
AWG 2.101624
AZN 2.007095
BAM 1.957218
BBD 2.350002
BDT 142.693347
BGN 1.954411
BHD 0.439541
BIF 3440.491812
BMD 1.165949
BND 1.511007
BOB 8.061908
BRL 6.24529
BSD 1.166745
BTN 102.926546
BWP 16.587013
BYN 3.976414
BYR 22852.609237
BZD 2.3466
CAD 1.625975
CDF 2971.426289
CHF 0.924831
CLF 0.028013
CLP 1098.953808
CNY 8.277366
CNH 8.272266
COP 4534.319117
CRC 584.923637
CUC 1.165949
CUP 30.89766
CVE 110.619446
CZK 24.313547
DJF 207.213018
DKK 7.468384
DOP 74.912524
DZD 151.470792
EGP 55.234987
ERN 17.489242
ETB 176.411386
FJD 2.635571
FKP 0.874785
GBP 0.878281
GEL 3.171244
GGP 0.874785
GHS 12.679726
GIP 0.874785
GMD 85.114576
GNF 10118.10924
GTQ 8.937473
GYD 244.106797
HKD 9.058436
HNL 30.746552
HRK 7.532502
HTG 152.730617
HUF 388.082807
IDR 19335.114636
ILS 3.79784
IMP 0.874785
INR 102.911654
IQD 1527.393781
IRR 49057.322616
ISK 143.400081
JEP 0.874785
JMD 187.047075
JOD 0.826668
JPY 177.431274
KES 150.638741
KGS 101.961839
KHR 4692.946387
KMF 492.031096
KPW 1049.332065
KRW 1669.727033
KWD 0.357608
KYD 0.972304
KZT 622.050526
LAK 25301.103197
LBP 104410.773001
LKR 355.047147
LRD 213.893566
LSL 20.100609
LTL 3.442745
LVL 0.705271
LYD 6.348588
MAD 10.757089
MDL 19.823357
MGA 5270.091041
MKD 61.61678
MMK 2447.760677
MNT 4184.077953
MOP 9.337863
MRU 46.713742
MUR 52.96922
MVR 17.850427
MWK 2024.667365
MXN 21.475308
MYR 4.89407
MZN 74.516073
NAD 20.100781
NGN 1698.951371
NIO 42.848413
NOK 11.630445
NPR 164.682273
NZD 2.015769
OMR 0.44832
PAB 1.166745
PEN 3.949117
PGK 4.890284
PHP 68.865061
PKR 327.631833
PLN 4.231055
PYG 8277.06574
QAR 4.245513
RON 5.083653
RSD 117.215362
RUB 92.39952
RWF 1690.626704
SAR 4.372423
SBD 9.596454
SCR 16.617165
SDG 701.313664
SEK 10.912412
SGD 1.508558
SHP 0.874764
SLE 27.048095
SLL 24449.376461
SOS 666.337745
SRD 46.111555
STD 24132.79959
STN 24.951318
SVC 10.209482
SYP 12891.699361
SZL 20.101118
THB 37.718329
TJS 10.775004
TMT 4.092483
TND 3.395235
TOP 2.730774
TRY 48.92382
TTD 7.919736
TWD 35.633045
TZS 2868.235554
UAH 49.086773
UGX 4056.938279
USD 1.165949
UYU 46.584139
UZS 14064.267442
VES 251.965116
VND 30697.117143
VUV 142.192976
WST 3.262327
XAF 656.432428
XAG 0.024787
XAU 0.000295
XCD 3.151036
XCG 2.102823
XDR 0.817303
XOF 656.429686
XPF 119.331742
YER 278.253833
ZAR 19.989273
ZMK 10494.947424
ZMW 25.610549
ZWL 375.435247
  • CMSC

    -0.0030

    24.312

    -0.01%

  • RIO

    1.2160

    72.146

    +1.69%

  • SCS

    -0.0250

    16.605

    -0.15%

  • BTI

    0.2850

    52.375

    +0.54%

  • CMSD

    -0.0400

    24.61

    -0.16%

  • BCC

    -0.7600

    72.26

    -1.05%

  • RBGPF

    0.0000

    79.09

    0%

  • RYCEF

    0.5100

    15.46

    +3.3%

  • AZN

    -1.7300

    82.33

    -2.1%

  • JRI

    -0.0400

    14.04

    -0.28%

  • NGG

    -0.3300

    76.84

    -0.43%

  • GSK

    -0.6500

    43.15

    -1.51%

  • BCE

    0.1850

    23.665

    +0.78%

  • BP

    -0.2550

    34.515

    -0.74%

  • RELX

    -0.2100

    46.43

    -0.45%

  • VOD

    0.3650

    12.265

    +2.98%

Seventh person likely 'cured' of HIV, doctors announce
Seventh person likely 'cured' of HIV, doctors announce / Photo: CHIP SOMODEVILLA - GETTY IMAGES NORTH AMERICA/AFP/File

Seventh person likely 'cured' of HIV, doctors announce

A 60-year-old German man is likely the seventh person to be effectively cured from HIV after receiving a stem cell transplant, doctors announced on Thursday.

Text size:

The painful and risky procedure is for people who have both HIV and aggressive leukaemia, so is not an option for almost all of the nearly 40 million people living with the deadly virus across the world.

The German man, whose wished to remain anonymous, was dubbed the "next Berlin patient".

The original Berlin patient, Timothy Ray Brown, was the first person declared cured of HIV back in 2008. Brown died from cancer in 2020.

The second man from Berlin to achieve long-term HIV remission was announced ahead of the 25th International AIDS Conference being held in the German city of Munich next week.

He was first diagnosed with HIV in 2009, according to the research abstract being presented at the conference.

The man received a bone marrow transplant for his leukaemia in 2015. The procedure, which has a 10 percent risk of death, essentially replaces a person's immune system.

Then he stopped taking anti-retroviral drugs -- which reduce the amount of HIV in the blood -- in late 2018.

Nearly six years later, he appears to be both HIV and cancer free, the medical researchers said.

Christian Gaebler, a doctor-researcher at Berlin's Charite university hospital treating the patient, told AFP that the team cannot be "absolutely certain" every last trace of HIV has been eradicated.

But "the patient's case is highly suggestive of an HIV cure," Gaebler added. "He feels well and is enthusiastic about contributing to our research efforts."

- 'Promising' for wider cure -

International AIDS Society President Sharon Lewin said researchers hesitate to use the word "cure" because it is not clear how long they need to follow up such cases.

But more than five years in remission means the man "would be close" to being considered cured, she told a press conference.

There is an important difference between the man's case and the other HIV patients who have reached long-term remission, she said.

All but one of the other patients received stem cells from donors with a rare mutation in which part of their CCR5 gene was missing, blocking HIV from entering their body's cells.

Those donors had inherited two copies of the mutated CCR5 gene -- one from each parent -- making them "essentially immune" to HIV, Lewin said.

But the new Berlin patient is the first to have received stem cells from a donor who had inherited only one copy of the mutated gene.

Around 15 percent of people from European origin have one mutated copy, compared to one percent for both.

Researchers hope the latest success means there will be a much larger potential donor pool in the future.

The new case is also "promising" for the wider search for an HIV cure that works for all patients, Lewin said.

This is "because it suggests that you don't actually have to get rid of every single piece of CCR5 for gene therapy to work," she added.

The Geneva patient, whose case was announced at last year's AIDS conference, is the other exception among the seven. He received a transplant from a donor without any CCR5 mutations -- yet still achieved long-term remission.

This showed that the effectiveness of the procedure was not just down to the CCR5 gene, Lewin said.

F.Vit--TPP