AIDS cured by Bone Marrow Transplant

madanthonywayne

Morning in America
Registered Senior Member
An American living in Germany being treated for AIDS had the "good forturne" to also aquire leukemia. His doctor recalled that 0.1% of Europeans carry a gene for HIV resistance. So, when searching for an appropriate bone marrow donor he also searched for one that carried the gene for HIV resistance. On the 61st donor screened, he found someone with the gene. So the patient went of all his HIV meds, underwent whole body irradiation to kill off the leukemia and the cells suseptable to HIV and has since had both his AIDS and his leukemia cured!
BERLIN (AP) - An American man who suffered from AIDS appears to have been cured of the disease 20 months after receiving a targeted bone marrow transplant normally used to fight leukemia, his doctors said.

While researchers - and the doctors themselves - caution that the case might be no more than a fluke, others say it may inspire a greater interest in gene therapy to fight the disease that claims 2 million lives each year. The virus has infected 33 million people worldwide.

Dr. Gero Huetter said Wedneday his 42-year-old patient, an American living in Berlin who was not identified, had been infected with the AIDS virus for more than a decade. But 20 months after undergoing a transplant of genetically selected bone marrow, he no longer shows signs of carrying the virus.

"We waited every day for a bad reading," Huetter said. It has not come. Researchers at Berlin's Charite hospital and medical school say tests on his bone marrow, blood and other organ tissues have all been clean.

However, Dr. Andrew Badley, director of the HIV and immunology research lab at the Mayo Clinic in Rochester, Minn., said those tests have probably not been extensive enough.

"A lot more scrutiny from a lot of different biological samples would be required to say it's not present," Badley said.

This isn't the first time marrow transplants have been attempted for treating AIDS or HIV infection. In 1999, an article in the journal Medical Hypotheses reviewed the results of 32 attempts reported between 1982 and 1996. In two cases, HIV was apparently eradicated, the review reported.

Huetter's patient was under treatment at Charite for both AIDS and leukemia, which developed unrelated to HIV.

(AP) German hematologist Gero Huetter of Berlin's Charite Medical University speaks during a news...
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As Huetter - who is a hematologist, not an HIV specialist - prepared to treat the patient's leukemia with a bone marrow transplant, he recalled that some people carry a genetic mutation that seems to make them resistant to HIV infection. If the mutation, called Delta 32, is inherited from both parents, it prevents HIV from attaching itself to cells by blocking CCR5, a receptor that acts as a kind of gateway.

"I read it in 1996, coincidentally," Huetter told reporters at the medical school. "I remembered it and thought it might work."

Roughly one in 1,000 Europeans and Americans have inherited the mutation from both parents, and Huetter set out to find one such person among donors that matched the patient's marrow type. Out of a pool of 80 suitable donors, the 61st person tested carried the proper mutation.

Before the transplant, the patient endured powerful drugs and radiation to kill off his own infected bone marrow cells and disable his immune system - a treatment fatal to between 20 and 30 percent of recipients.

He was also taken off the potent drugs used to treat his AIDS. Huetter's team feared that the drugs might interfere with the new marrow cells' survival. They risked lowering his defenses in the hopes that the new, mutated cells would reject the virus on their own.

Anthony Fauci, director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infections Diseases in the U.S., said the procedure was too costly and too dangerous to employ as a firstline cure. But he said it could inspire researchers to pursue gene therapy as a means to block or suppress HIV.

"It helps prove the concept that if somehow you can block the expression of CCR5, maybe by gene therapy, you might be able to inhibit the ability of the virus to replicate," Fauci said.
http://apnews.myway.com/article/20081113/D94E79080.html

Too costly for a first line cure? If you were, say, magic Johnson, wouldn't this interest you?
 
It has long be suggested to cure AIDS by gene therapy on immune system stem cells (bone marrow) extracted from a patient and then re-implant the HIV immune stem cells back. Obviously such a cure is still too expensive for most of the worlds aids suffers, but at least we now know it not theoretical and that it can be done.
 
mad i thought they were already doing bone marror donations for HIV?
If so why has no one picked this up before?
 
It's not just a matter of money, it's a matter of finding someone who is both immune to HIV and a bone marrow donor match. Usually that's pretty much impossible, regardless of how much money you want to throw at the problem. As I recall these German doctors had been wanting to do this for a while, and it took them years to find even a single case where it was possible.
 
I think the jury is still out on wither the individual has been cured. But based on what we know it does appear to be the case. I think this points out the value of continued genetic research.

And for this to be succesful the donor was chosen because they possesed genes that were resistant to the HIV strain. It is more than just a question of cost, they cannot guarentee perfect donors for every patient.
 
It has long be suggested to cure AIDS by gene therapy on immune system stem cells (bone marrow) extracted from a patient and then re-implant the HIV immune stem cells back. Obviously such a cure is still too expensive for most of the worlds aids suffers, but at least we now know it not theoretical and that it can be done.

You are right.
They are not considering using person to person marrow transplants as a form of treatment, though I don't see why it couldn't be tried in a few cases.
 
It's not just a matter of money, it's a matter of finding someone who is both immune to HIV and a bone marrow donor match. Usually that's pretty much impossible, regardless of how much money you want to throw at the problem. As I recall these German doctors had been wanting to do this for a while, and it took them years to find even a single case where it was possible.


Yes. I listened to a radio interview with one of the doctors in question and he made it quite clear that this will not and cannot become a routine clinical treatment for precisely those reasons. It does, however, raise hopes that a gene therapy approach can be found to curing HIV infection.
 
there is a risk with gene theorpy though, i belive that they use a modified retrovirus to implant the gens. However there is no telling what this will do in someone with such a compamised immune system as someone with HIV. The risk would be there that the viru you implant would mutate back to an infectious form and that the body would be unable to fight it off.

Or have i miss read the proccess?
 
Gene therapy of haematopoietic stem cells (HSCs) is relatively easy compared to other gene therapy applications. In fact, HSC gene therapy is the only routinely practiced gene therapy technique. This is due to the fact that a person’s HSCs can be extracted and isolated from a bone marrow sample and subsequentrly re-introduced into the bone marrow. Thus, the genetic modification of a patient’s HSCs can be done in vitro rather than trying to introduce potentially dangerous viral vectors into the person.

The approach goes something like this.....

Extract a sample of the patient’s bone marrow --> isolate HSCs --> grow HSCs in tissue culture --> introduce new gene(s) into HSCs in culture --> irradiate patient’s bone marrow to kill of existing bone marrow cells (including HSCs) --> re-introduce modified HSCs back into patient’s bone marrow --> allow modified HSCs to repopulate bone marrow with new haematopoietic cells (with all progeny cells carrying the genetic modification)

This technique has been used for some time now to treat some haematopoietic cancers.
 
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