The Philippine Star

Hunt for AIDS cure accelerate­s as GSK, US experts link up

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Britain's GlaxoSmith­Kline, which decided last week to retain rather than float off its HIV drugs business, is to collaborat­e with US scientists in developing a cure for AIDS.

Until recently, many researcher­s were reluctant to even discuss the possibilit­y of curing the disease caused by HIV, which infects 35 million people worldwide, since the obstacles seemed insurmount­able.

But after a 30-year battle to keep HIV at bay with life-time antiretrov­iral drugs, there is growing optimism that a cure is feasible.

The case of Timothy Brown, the so- called “Berlin patient” whose HIV was eradicated by a complex treatment for leukemia in 2007, marked the first cure and the science has been advancing since then.

GSK is tapping into the latest expertise by creating an HIV Cure Center with the University of North Carolina (UNC) at Chapel Hill and establishi­ng a new jointly owned company.

The drugmaker said on Monday it would invest $20 million to help fund the work for an initial five years.

Scientists will study various cure options, including a socalled “shock-and-kill” strategy developed at UNC, which unmasks dormant HIV hiding in white blood cells, so that it can be attacked by a boosted immune system.

It is likely to prove a long haul, however.

“In the next five to 10 years we should gain more knowledge around the various mechanisms that could contribute to a cure and maybe in the next 10 to 20 years we can really bring these modalities together,” Zhi Hong, GSK’s infectious diseases head, told Reuters.

In the case of the Berlin patient, curing HIV involved a stem cell transplant from a donor with a rare genetic mutation that resists HIV infection.

This complicate­d approach could never be replicated on a large scale, so researcher­s are pinning their hopes on simplified systems that may also be able to exploit recent breakthrou­ghs in immune system-boosting drugs for cancer.

“I expect we will have progress in fits and starts, so we need a structure to pursue this work in a rational way over a long period of time,” said David Margolis of UNC. —

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