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- <text id=93TT1205>
- <title>
- Mar. 22, 1993: Are Some People Immune to AIDS?
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1993
- Mar. 22, 1993 Can Animals Think
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- MEDICINE, Page 49
- Are Some People Immune to AIDS?
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>An amazing group of men, who have thrived with HIV for more
- than a decade, may reveal how to beat it
- </p>
- <p>By CHRISTINE GORMAN
- </p>
- <p> Anyone who thinks that being infected with HIV amounts to
- an automatic death sentence should talk to Rob Anderson. The
- 39-year-old San Francisco artist has beaten the odds against him
- by living--no, thriving--with the virus that causes AIDS for
- 14 years. At 6 ft. 2 in. and 170 lbs., Anderson has only routine
- medical complaints: the stuffiness of an occasional head cold
- or the aches and pains of a flu. His good health is not the work
- of some miracle drug: he has never taken AZT or any other
- compound to fight HIV. Incredible as it sounds, Anderson's own
- immune system seems to have held the villainous virus at bay.
- "It feels good to be on the winning side of HIV," he says.
- Looking to the future with surprisingly little fear, he hopes
- to fix up the crumbling Victorian house that he shares with his
- HIV-negative companion of 10 years.
- </p>
- <p> Does Anderson have a natural immunity to AIDS? Just a few
- years ago, the idea would have seemed absurd. But that was
- before the results started coming in from a group of long-term
- health studies of 10,000 gay men, begun in the late 1970s to
- mid-1980s. Scientists, prodded by AIDS activists who wanted to
- "study the healthy" and to lift the shadows of doom that
- surround the disease, have now documented at least 70 cases like
- Anderson's. Researchers are also beginning to find similarly
- healthy, long-lived survivors among women and children with HIV.
- There is now good reason to hope that at least 5% of the
- estimated 1 million Americans infected with the virus may never
- come down with the disease.
- </p>
- <p> It sounds like the most morbid of questions to ask of a
- patient: "Why aren't you dead yet--or even sick?" Looking for
- the answers may prove to be one of the most productive avenues
- of research in the battle against AIDS. By shifting their focus
- to the healthy, many researchers believe they can make dramatic
- improvements in the treatment of everyone who is infected with
- HIV--whether ailing or not. Just as important, their work
- could channel the scattershot search for a vaccine into new and
- more promising directions. "Early in the epidemic we thought
- everyone who got infected died," says Dr. Lewis Schrager of the
- National Institutes of Health. "And that still may be true. But
- I'm becoming convinced that there is something about these
- people who are not progressing to AIDS that is worth intensive
- investigation."
- </p>
- <p> Resistance to HIV does not seem to be the same as more
- common examples of immunity. The body's protective
- countermeasures against measles and mumps are absolute. Years
- after exposure, there is no hint within the body of the foreign
- agents that cause those diseases. After children become immune
- to mumps, they can no longer infect other people.
- </p>
- <p> That is not the case for healthy HIV survivors, no matter
- how wholesome their glow. They test positive for antibodies to
- HIV and small amounts of virus can be detected in their blood.
- Although stable, their immune systems show telltale signs of
- having been weakened by the infection--not enough to make them
- sick but enough to register on blood tests. "We don't know how
- infectious these people are," says Dr. Susan Buchbinder of the
- San Francisco Department of Public Health. "But we have to
- assume that they can pass on the virus."
- </p>
- <p> So why aren't they sick? Clinicians and researchers have
- poked, prodded, questioned and bled their healthy human guinea
- pigs four to six times a year every year in search of any
- relevant information. Last month the NIH held its first
- scientific conference to evaluate the mounting evidence. So far,
- success in fighting HIV does not appear to be closely linked to
- good diets, the lack of drug use or stress or the absence of
- other sexually transmitted diseases. Finding no simple patterns,
- researchers are zeroing in on the men's individual immune
- responses, even searching through their genetic makeups for the
- reasons behind their special status. Thanks to advances that
- have been made in molecular biology and immunology since the
- start of the AIDS epidemic, scientists have found some
- tantalizing clues.
- </p>
- <p> Their investigation begins with a white blood cell called
- CD4. It is the linchpin of the immune system and the main
- target of HIV. As a general rule, people who become infected by
- HIV suffer a drop in their CD4 count from a normal level of
- about 1,200 cells per 1/1000th of a mL of blood to 500 cells or
- less. The risk of developing one or more of the illnesses
- associated with AIDS rises dramatically if the CD4 count drops
- below 200.
- </p>
- <p> One of the most striking things about the healthy
- survivors is that after the initial drop, their CD4 count
- stabilizes--usually above 500. Assaulted but not overwhelmed,
- they no longer lose any ground against HIV. One possible
- explanation is that these men were exposed to a strain of the
- virus that is naturally weaker than most. The immune system
- subdues the less malevolent virus, allowing the body to fend off
- any new attacks by more dangerous strains. In the same way,
- English milkmaids who suffered from cowpox in the 18th century
- developed an immunity to the disease that also protected them
- against its more lethal cousin, smallpox. After studying these
- women in 1796, Edward Jenner developed his smallpox vaccine.
- </p>
- <p> Investigators are also excited by the possibility that
- some of the HIV survivors' immune systems are cannier than a
- chess master. They apparently do not allow their opponent much
- freedom of movement and prevent the virus from mutating very
- often. This makes the infection easier to control because the
- body does not have to recognize and subdue new variations every
- few months. If researchers could figure out how a survivor can
- keep such tight control of the chessboard, then perhaps they
- can find a way to give other patients the same ability.
- Clinicians might even be able to boost the defenses of people
- whose immune systems have already suffered serious damage.
- </p>
- <p> The healthy survivors may lead a genetically charmed life.
- Each of the body's cells possesses an identical inherited
- molecular trait, dubbed its HLA type, that allows an individual
- to distinguish friend from microscopic foe. Some people's HLA
- types are more common than others. Heredity specialists have
- already identified a few genetic types that appear to increase
- a person's chance of developing AIDS after infection. Now they
- are trying to determine if long-term survivors hold any
- inherited molecular configurations in common that could be
- responsible for their ability to resist HIV.
- </p>
- <p> One of the most surprising findings has been the discovery
- of a subset of healthy, long-term survivors who have lived for
- years with CD4 counts less than 200. For the most part, they do
- not develop the secondary infections that are associated with
- AIDS, or if they do, they tend to recover. This only goes to
- prove that there is a lot about the immune system that
- immunologists still do not understand. Some researchers believe
- these men managed to press other white blood cells into service
- to make up for the CD4 deficiency.
- </p>
- <p> Because gay men were the first people to be studied, most
- of the current data comes from them. In the past 18 months,
- however, researchers have launched a growing number of studies
- of women and children infected with HIV, and the preliminary
- results are encouraging. Once investigators start looking for
- healthy survivors, they find them. Still the question remains--Why? Does the amount of virus a woman is exposed to make a
- difference? How effective might her vaginal and cervical tissue
- be as a barrier against infection? Does it matter if a child is
- infected while still in the womb or during passage through the
- birth canal?
- </p>
- <p> The answers to these and other questions are just
- beginning to take shape. By painstakingly studying the same
- individuals over long periods of time, scientists are changing
- the way they think about AIDS. Clearly, some people can fight
- off the virus on their own. Over the past five years, doctors
- have developed more and more treatments to control the
- opportunistic infections and illnesses that appear in other
- patients. Scientists may not discover a cure, but if they learn
- how to control an HIV infection the way diabetes can be managed
- with insulin, they will have tamed one of the most feared
- killers of the 20th century.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
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