July 19, 2016
Investigators have created a consortium in an effort to yield HIV
cures through stem cell transplants similar to the cure achieved in the
Berlin Patient, the man whose HIV and leukemia were cured following a
pair of stem cell transplants, and to closely study such cure attempts.
The EpiStem Cconsortium presented an update of its program at the 21st
International AIDS Conference in Durban, South Africa (AIDS 2016).
The
consortium seeks to aid clinicians who have HIV-positive patients in
need of stem cell transplants in finding donors who, like the donor in
the case of the Berlin Patient, have a genetic abnormality called the
CCR5 delta-32 mutation, which causes a natural resistance to HIV
infection in immune cells. The consortium also provides counsel on
related ethical guidelines, the stem cell transplant procedure, sampling
procedures and how to study the persistence of the virus after the
procedure.
The investigators are seeking to determine
whether along with the CCR5 delta-32 mutation, certain factors may help
eradicate the viral reservoir, including a regimen that conditions the
body for the transplant, total body radiation and a phenomenon called
graft versus host disease, which is a negative bodily reaction to the
transplant.
The consortium has searched for the CCR5
delta-32 mutation in almost 30,000 umbilical cord blood units in
numerous European blood banks as well as in more than 1,000,000 adult
donors. It has also registered 20 HIV-positive people with an array of
blood cancers.
Since 2012, 15 HIV-positive members of
the registry have received stem cell transplants, including five who
received a transplant with a CCR5 delta-32 mutation, one with a
heterozygous mutation and nine with a wild-type CCR5 gene, meaning it
lacked the delta-32 mutation. In three instances, the donor cells were
from cord blood; in the other cases they were from an adult donor.
The
CCR5 is a pair of genes that spurs the development of the CCR5
coreceptor on the surface of immune cells onto which most HIV latches in
order to establish infection. A homozygous CCR5 delta-32 mutation
involves mutations on both genes, while a heterozygous one has only one
such mutation between the two genes. The Berlin Patient’s own genetic
profile showed that he was heterozygous to the CCR5 delta-32 mutation;
his donor was homozygous. Researchers are not certain whether the Berlin
Patient’s heterozygous state influenced the success of his cure.
Five
individuals have thus far spent a year or more in follow-up after their
transplants, and nine have died following the transplants. All five
surviving individuals are on antiretroviral (ARV) treatment. A
preliminary analysis of blood and tissue samples of the five surviving
individuals shows that they have very low levels of HIV reservoirs. The
researchers presented to the AIDS 2016 conference in-depth analyses of
three of these individuals, each of whom received their transplants more
than three years ago. Investigators have not been able to measure
infectious HIV in the blood of two of them and can find only a trace of
the virus in tissues.
Because all six surviving
individuals are still on HIV treatment, the researchers do not yet know
whether they are cured. They would have to stop treatment so researchers
could monitor them for viral rebound and otherwise try to detect signs
that the virus may yet emerge.
Find more articles like this one from POZ: https://www.poz.com
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