The most famous Berlin patient is \ Timothy Ray Brown. He is originally from Seattle, Washington . The Berlin patient is a phr...
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| The most famous Timothy Ray Brown. He is originally from Seattle, Washington. |
The Berlin
patient is a
phrase that has been used on two distinct and unrelated occasions to describe a
person who has received a functional cure for HIV in Berlin, Germany . The first Berlin patient, who we now know is not
cured, was described in 1998. After
receiving an experimental therapy, the
patient, who has remained anonymous, has
maintained at low levels of HIV and
has remained off antiretroviral
therapy. The
first patient is no longer considered to be cured of HIV and the lower levels
of HIV detectable in his blood are likely because he has the HLA B*57 allele
associated HIV replication control. The
world renowned "second" Berlin
patient, Timothy Ray Brown, was first described in 2008 following a poster
presented at the CROI 2008 Conference in Boston
by Dr. Gero Hütter. He received a stem cell transplant from a donor naturally
resistant to HIV and has remained off
antiretroviral since
the first day of his stem cell transplant. Timothy Ray Brown is thought to be
the first and only person in the world cured of HIV.
Anonymous: the 1998 Berlin patient
The first Berlin patient was a German in his
mid-twenties. He was a patient of
Dr. Heiko Jessen in Berlin, Germany. He was diagnosed with acute HIV
infection in 1996. He was
prescribed an unusual combination therapy: didanosine, indinavir and hydroxyurea.
Hydroxyurea was the most unusual of the three,
as it is a cancer drug
not approved by the U.S. Food and Drug
Administration (FDA)
for HIV treatment. The
combination was part of a small trial Dr. Jessen was testing in patients during
acute HIV infection. After
several treatment interruptions, the patient went off the prescribed therapy
completely.The virus became almost undetectable. The patient has remained off
antiretroviral therapy. In 2014 a
follow-up report in NEJM suggest that the patient most likely controlled HIV
because of the genetic background and not because of the particular treatment
he received during acute HIV infection. He
is no longer considered to be cured of HIV because he has a detectable viral load likely
controlled by the genetic mutation he has.
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| Timothy Ray Brown, known by many researchers as "the Berlin patient," is the only person to have been cured of an HIV infection. |
The most famous Berlin patient is Timothy Ray Brown. He is
originally from Seattle, Washington. He was diagnosed with HIV in 1995 and
began antiretroviral
therapy. In 2006, Timothy was diagnosed with acute myeloid
leukemia (AML). His
physician, Dr. Gero Hütter, at Charité Hospital in Berlin,
arranged for him to receive a hematopoietic
stem cell transplant from
a donor with the CCR5 delta32 mutation. This mutation, found at relatively high frequencies
in Northern Europeans, results in a mutated CCR5 protein.The majority of HIV cannot enter a
human cell without
a functional CCR5 gene.
An exception to this is a small minority of viruses that
use alternate receptors,
such as CXCR4 orCCR2. Those individuals who are homozygous for
the CCR5 mutation are resistant to HIV and rarely progress to AIDS.
Timothy received two stem cell transplants from one donor homozygous for
the delta32 mutation: one in 2007 and one in 2008. Timothy stopped taking his
antretroviral therapy on the day of his first transplant. Three months after
the first stem cell transplant, levels of HIV rapidly plummeted to undetectable
levels while his CD4 T cell count increased. In addition,
blood and tissue samples from areas of the body where HIV is known to hide were
tested. The results were published in the New England
Journal of Medicine. Today,
Timothy still remains off antiretroviral therapy and is considered cured. Today leading HIV cure scientists
agree that Timothy has what is called a sterilizing cure as opposed to a
functional cure. In 2012, Timothy Ray Brown announced the formation of an
organization whose sole purpose is to find a cure for AIDS called the Cure for
AIDS Coalition. The first project of the Cure for AIDS Coalition is the Cure
Report launched on October 16, 2014 during the NIH Strategies for an HIV Cure
meeting held in the Washington ,
DC area.
Cure Research studies
inspired by Timothy Ray Brown, the Berlin Patient
Scientists around the world agree that all
cure for HIV related research studies today was inspired by the remarkable case
of Timothy Ray Brown, the Berlin Patient. In fact, on December 2, 2013,
President Obama announced during a speech commemorating World AIDS Day;
"Today I’m pleased to announce a new initiative at the National Institutes
of Health to advance research into an HIV cure. We’re going to redirect $100
million into this project to develop a new generation of therapies. Because the
United States should be at the forefront of new discoveries into how to put HIV
into long-term remission without requiring lifelong therapies -- or, better
yet, eliminate it completely."Some of the HIV cure research today inspired
by the case of Timothy Ray Brown focus on gene therapy and early treatment. and HIV eradication and early therapy


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