Just days ago, there was explosive, positive news on the HIV/AIDS front. Doctors confirmed that another person has been cured of HIV, only the second time this has happened since the virus reared its ugly head more than 37 years ago.
Although researchers are officially calling the event âlong term remissionââthe âLondon patient,â as he is known, has been in remission for a year and a halfâit is indeed a thrilling breakthrough, especially since the âBerlin patientâ (now identified as Timothy Brown), was cured using a similar transplant more than a decade ago.
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The L.A. Times reports on the specifics of the case, which involved a bone marrow transplant to treat co-morbid cancer:
The London patient, infected with HIV and suffering from Hodgkinâs lymphoma, received bone marrow cells from a donor who had a malfunctioning CCR5 gene as part of his cancer treatment. The gene is known to create a protein that is crucial for HIV to invade blood cells. Brown had also received a transplant without functioning CCR5 genes.
A second set of âBoston patients,â who received stem cell transplants with functioning CCR5 genes, also experienced marked reductions in the reservoir of HIV in their cells â and were able to go without treatment for months, showing that the transplant itself played a role in knocking back the virus. But their temporary results also suggested that the aberrant gene was necessary for a sustained cure.
Despite efforts to replicate the remarkable Berlin results, researchers had failed for a decadeâin part because the possibility of doing such transplants is rare.
âI think itâs a really, really exciting breakthrough, to be able to finally replicate the first known cure,â Raniyah Copeland, President and CEO of the Black AIDS Institute, told The Root. âIt doesnât mean [a cure for all] tomorrow, but it does mean that weâre closer than weâve ever been before.â
Copeland, the 34-year-old newly minted head of BAI (she took the post on Jan. 1), also cautions that the true end of HIVâespecially for black folksâstill lay with prevention and accessing the tools that have been developed in the last three decades. Black communities in particular, which are still being infected and dying at wildly disproportionate rates, need to utilize the resources already available, which have taken HIV from a deadly to a chronic disease.
âSo we already have all of these amazing tools that could theoretically end HIV,â notes Copeland. âWe have this amazing technology where weâre able to identify when new HIV cases are happening. We have pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP), so when people are HIV-negative, they are able to take a daily pill and stop acquisition, but we still have HIV infections.â
âWe know that black people donât achieve viral suppression in the way our other counterparts do, so … we have to make sure we do the other work to ensure that the communities that need these resources are receiving them,â Copeland continues. âThis is not the end, but itâs an important step in getting there.â
We know that the âBerlin patientâ and the âLondon patientâ received their stem cell transplants from a donor of Northern European descent with an aberrant CCR5 gene. Copeland says she doesnât think ethnicity per se means a whole lot in terms of the science of a cure but does underscore that black folks need to be involved in clinical research.
âWe have to be engaged so that when breakthroughs are happening, we can see them in our community as well. Thereâs this one kind of trait, a certain receptor that is found in the Euro line of descent,â confirms Copeland. âSo thatâs important that we know that there are different genetic differences and mutations that happen; and I think that what it means is that itâs really important that people who are heavily impacted by HIV are taking part in clinical trials and in research so that we can see what this means for all communities.â
And in the meantime, Copeland stresses that we need to hold the feet of those who hold the keys to research funds to the fire, including President Donald Trump, who announced in his most recent State of the Union that he was putting forth a strategy to end HIV in the U.S. in 10 years.
âWeâre excited to hear that folks are listening to the science. Weâve been saying that we can end HIV for years now, so weâre excited that there is some support around that,â Copeland said. âBut that means that we canât give up, particularly when it comes to research. We have to ensure that thereâs important and critical funding for HIV research so that we can find a cure, [or] a vaccine.â
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