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The first person reportedly cured of HIV said Wednesday he is hopeful that medical advances will allow others suffering from the virus that causes AIDS to be cured, too.
Timothy
Ray Brown of San Francisco is known as "The Berlin Patient" because of
where he was treated. He and the doctor who treated him, Gero Hutter, made their first joint appearance in the U.S. on Wednesday when Hutter spoke at a symposium on gene therapy at Washington University in St. Louis.
Scientists
are studying whether gene therapy can be used to rid the body of HIV.
Some doctors remain skeptical that Brown, 46, is cured. His case was
first reported in the media in 2008 and described in the New England Journal of Medicine in 2009.
Brown
and Hutter, in an interview with The Associated Press during the
symposium, said the passage of time is further proof that Brown is
cured. Hutter cited the same five-year standard after which some cancer
patients are said to be cured.
Brown was diagnosed with HIV in 1995. In 2006, he also developed leukemia while living in Germany. Hutter performed a blood stem cell transplant using a donor with a rare gene mutation that provides natural resistance to HIV. Hutter said that resistance transferred to Brown.
Brown said he feels great, has not needed HIV medication since the 2007 surgery, and is now active in a foundation named for him that seeks a cure for HIV.
Brown
grew up in Seattle and moved to Germany in 1993. After the HIV
diagnosis, he started on medication to prevent him from developing
full-blown AIDS.
He was
attending a wedding in New York in 2006 when he became unusually tired.
An avid cyclist, within weeks he could barely ride the bike and
eventually was diagnosed with leukemia.
Brown
underwent chemotherapy but needed a blood stem cell transplant and
turned to Hutter, a blood specialist at Heidelberg University.
Hutter
suggested they seek a donor with a certain cell feature that gives them
natural resistance to HIV infection. Only about 1 percent of the
northern European population has this feature. Hutter theorized that a
transplant from such a donor could make the recipient resistant to HIV.
Hutter
said no one apparently had tried this, and his idea received mixed
reaction from other doctors. "Some were very excited, but many were
skeptical," he said.
But within weeks, Hutter said, tests showed promise that Brown was cured.
"I
don't know if I really believed it was cured" until the case was
described in the New England Journal of Medicine, Brown said.
Earlier
this year, doctors in California found traces of HIV in Brown's tissue,
leading to speculation that the disease had returned. But Hutter said
the traces are remnants of the disease that can't replicate or cause a
recurrence.
The symposium in
St. Louis was hosted by the university's Biologic Therapeutics Center,
which seeks to advance the use of gene therapy. Speakers said gene
therapy has helped treat cancer, hemophilia and other diseases.
So
far, Brown is the only person believed to have been cured of HIV.
Hutter began procedures in 2008 with 12 other people who had both HIV
and cancer, but some were too sick to undergo treatment, and others
couldn't find matching donors or ran into other roadblocks.
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