San Diego Union-Tribune

SCIENTISTS: 3RD PATIENT CURED OF HIV

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A woman of mixed race appears to be the third person ever to be cured of HIV, using a new transplant method involving umbilical cord blood that opens up the possibilit­y of curing more people of diverse racial background­s than was previously possible, scientists announced Tuesday.

Cord blood is more widely available than the adult stem cells used in the bone marrow transplant­s that cured the previous two patients, and it does not need to be matched as closely to the recipient. Most donors in registries are of Caucasian origin, so allowing for only a partial match has the potential to cure dozens of Americans who have both HIV and cancer each year, scientists said.

The woman, who also had leukemia, received cord blood to treat her cancer. It came from a partially matched donor, instead of the typical practice of finding a bone marrow donor of similar race and ethnicity to the patient’s. She also received blood from a close relative to give her body temporary immune defenses while the transplant took.

Researcher­s presented some of the details of the new case Tuesday at the Conference on Retrovirus­es and Opportunis­tic Infections in Denver.

The sex and racial background of the new case mark a significan­t step forward in developing a cure for HIV, the researcher­s said.

“The fact that she’s mixed race, and that she’s a woman, that is really important scientific­ally and really important in terms of the community impact,” said Dr. Steven Deeks, an AIDS expert at the University of California San Francisco who was not involved in the work.

Infection with HIV is thought to progress differentl­y in women than in men, but while women account for more than half of HIV cases in the world, they make up only 11 percent of participan­ts in cure trials.

There have only been two known cases of an HIV cure so far. Referred to as “The Berlin Patient,” Timothy Ray Brown stayed virus-free for 12 years, until he died in 2020 of cancer. In 2019, another patient, later identified as Adam Castillejo, was reported to be cured of HIV, confirming that Brown’s case was not a fluke.

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