By Kate Kelland
LONDON
(Reuters) - Treating people with HIV rapidly after they
have become infected with the virus that causes AIDS may be enough to achieve a
"functional cure" in a small proportion of patients diagnosed early,
according to new research.
Scientists in France who followed 14 patients who were
treated very swiftly with HIV drugs but then stopped treatment found that even
when they had been off therapy for more than seven years, they still showed no
signs of the virus rebounding.
The research, published in the journal PLoS Pathogens,
follows news earlier this month about a baby girl in Mississippi in the United
States being effectively cured of the human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) after
receiving very early treatment.
Christine Rouzioux, a professor at Necker Hospital and
University Paris Descartes and a member of the initial team who identified HIV
30 years ago, said the new results showed the number of infected cells
circulating in the blood of these patients, known as "post-treatment
controllers", kept falling even without treatment for many years.
"Early treatment in these patients may have limited
the establishment of viral reservoirs, the extent of viral mutations, and
preserved immune responses. A combination of those may contribute to control
infection in post-treatment controllers," she said.
"The shrinking of viral reservoirs ... closely
matches the definition of 'functional' cure," she said.
A functional cure describes when the virus is reduced to
such low levels that it is kept at bay even without continuing treatment. The
virus, however, is still detectable in the body.
Most of the some 34 million people with HIV across the
world will have to take anti-AIDS drugs known as antiretroviral therapy for the
whole of their lives. These drugs generally keep the disease in check but also
have side effects and a high cost impact on health systems.
Worldwide, the number of people newly infected with HIV,
which can be transmitted via blood and by semen during sex, is falling. At 2.5
million, the number of new infections in 2011 was 20 percent lower than in
2001, according to the United National AIDS programme (UNAIDS). And deaths from
AIDS fell to 1.7 million in 2011, down from a peak of 2.3 million in 2005.
Asier Saez-Cirion, a senior HIV researcher at the Institut
Pasteur in Paris, said that although most patients will not be able to control
HIV, these results suggest that at least some may be able to if they get
treatment early enough.
"(This data) and the Mississippi study strongly
support early treatment initiation and may hold important clues for the
development of a strategy to cure HIV or at least induce a long-term control
without the need of antiretroviral treatment," he said.
(Editing by Ben Hirschler)
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