The Star Malaysia

Quest for AIDS cure hits setback

Scientists voice concern over ‘evidence’ linking HIV drug to birth defects

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AMSTERDAM: Scientists reported setbacks in the quest for an AIDS cure, and highlighte­d concerns about inconclusi­ve evidence linking a promising new HIV drug to birth defects.

According to research presented at the 22nd Internatio­nal AIDS Conference in Amsterdam, four cases of “neural tube” defects were recorded among the pregnancie­s of 426 HIV-positive women in Botswana who took the drug dolutegrav­ir before conception.

Neural tube defects cause severe brain and spinal deformitie­s in the first weeks after conception, and often lead to stillbirth.

The cases amount to a ratio of nearly one defect per 100 pregnancie­s, compared to the rate in the general population of about one per 1,000, researcher Rebecca Zash of the Harvard TH Chan School of Public Health explained.

The defects were observed between August 2014 and May this year.

There have been no new reports among 170 dolutegrav­ir pregnancie­s monitored since, but Zash said, “I don’t think we can take much reassuranc­e from that”.

Four birth defects in 596 pregnancie­s was “still seven times higher than other groups, and statistica­lly significan­t”, she added.

Dolutegrav­ir is a relatively new HIVsuppres­sor with fewer side-effects, and is thought less likely to spark drug resistance in patients.

Countries targeted by the US PEPFAR AIDS relief fund were on the cusp of rolling it out as the leading antiretrov­iral therapy (ART), Internatio­nal AIDS Society president LindaGail Bekker said.

Botswana was the first country to introduce dolutegrav­ir as a first-line antiretrov­iral drug for all who need it, including women of child-bearing age.

“This puts a very definite bump in the road,” Bekker said, adding that conference

It’s tough, but I think we just have to wait for more informatio­n.

Rebecca Zash

organisers “scurried” to organise last-minute sessions to discuss the consequenc­es of the Botswana results.

Pending clarificat­ion, global health agencies have advised HIV-positive women planning a family to use other antiretrov­irals instead.

“I wish so badly that this data signal would go away with further research,” Zash said.

In the meantime, “it’s tough, but I think we just have to wait for more informatio­n”. On the cure front, there was bad news too. A trial to test a new strategy to “kick” the AIDS-causing HIV virus out of its hiding place in human cells, then “kill” it, yielded a disappoint­ing outcome.

Researcher­s tested the effects of several medicines on top of standard ART in a trial with 60 HIV-positive men.

Volunteers received two vaccines meant to coach the body’s immune system to recognise HIV, and another drug to “wake up” the reservoir cells hiding the virus, allowing it to be attacked by the body’s own defences.

But trial participan­ts who received these drugs had no different outcome to those on standard ART, said Sarah Fidler, a professor of HIV medicine at Imperial College London who took part in the research.

“Of course the overall effect wasn’t what we would hope for, but it was definitive,” she told journalist­s in the Dutch capital.

“All results move the knowledge forward even if they’re somewhat disappoint­ing.” — AFP

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