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ART drugs, vitamin B3 HIV cure?

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A FIRST case of an Hiv-positive man who went into long-term remission after being treated for less than a year with an intensifie­d multi-drug cocktail of Aids medicines has added to hopes of a possible future cure for the disease.

The 34-year-old Brazilian, who was diagnosed with HIV in 2012, was treated with a base of antiretrov­iral therapy, or ART, which was boosted with additional antiretrov­irals, plus a drug called nicotinami­de, a form of vitamin B3.

The intensifie­d treatment was halted after 48 weeks, doctors said yesterday, and 57 weeks later his HIV DNA in cells and his HIV antibody test remain negative.

“This case is extremely interestin­g, and I really hope that it may boost further research into an HIV cure,” Andrea Savarino, a doctor at Italy’s Institute of Health who co-led the trial, said in an interview with the UK charity NAM Aidsmap.

He cautioned, however, that four other Hiv-positive patients treated in the trial with the same intensifie­d drug cocktail saw no positive effect against HIV.

“The result is highly likely not to be reproducib­le,” he said. “This a very first (preliminar­y) experiment, and I wouldn’t foresee beyond that.”

As scientists race to develop vaccines and treatments for Covid-19 the struggle goes on to find a cure for HIV, which has infected more than 75 million people and killed almost 33 million since the Aids pandemic began in the 1980s.

Patients who have access to HIV drugs are able to control the virus and keep the disease in check, and there are many ways to stop it spreading, but 38 million people are living with HIV.

Hopes of a cure for Aids have been boosted in recent years by two separate cases of remission in men who are described by doctors as “functional­ly cured” after being treated with risky and complex bone marrow transplant­s.

Commenting on this latest case, which was presented at an Aids conference in San Francisco, Sharon Lewin, an HIV specialist at Australia’s Doherty Institute, said it was “very interestin­g” but raised many questions.

“As this man was part of a larger clinical trial, it will be important to fully understand what happened to the other participan­ts,” she said.

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