News (Updated October 15, 2005)

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Brazil Reaches AIDS Drug Deal With Abbott

Tue Oct 11, 5:35 PM ET

Brazil has reached an agreement with U.S. pharmaceutical manufacturer Abbott Laboratories Inc. to lower AIDS drug Kaletra's price, heading off a possibility the country would break the patent, the health ministry said Tuesday.

In a statement, the health ministry said the deal would reduce the price of Kaletra to 63 cents a pill down from its current price of $1.17, saving the government $339 million over six years.

"With the agreement, the need for breaking the patent is suspended," Health Minister Jose Saraiva Felipe said at a press conference in Brasilia. "The price we reached is what the national AIDS program could pay."

In a June, Brazil's health ministry had threatened to break the patent on Kaletra and produce the drug itself at government laboratories unless the company substantially lowered the price of the medication or transferred the drug's patent to the Brazilian government.

In July, outgoing Health Minister Humberto Costa announced a deal, but shortly after taking over for Costa, Felipe announced the deal was suspended and Brazil would continue negotiating with Abbott.

Kaletra is one of more than a dozen medications that make up the so-called drug cocktail used to treat patients with HIV or AIDS, but the health ministry said its price previous to the agreement was so high that it endangered the sustainability of Brazil's AIDS program.

Abbott from its headquarters in the U.S. praised Tuesday's deal.

"This is a good long-term agreement that provides for a continuing supply for genuine Kaletra for Brazilian patients," said Brian Kyhos, director of public affairs at Abbott. "It was important for Abbott that the agreement respects our intellectual property."

Brazil in recent years repeatedly had threatened to break patents of AIDS drugs from several companies. The government has been successful in reaching substantial price reductions, but never actually broke a patent of an AIDS drug.

The United Nations regards Brazil's AIDS program as a model for treating the disease in the developing world. The government provides AIDS drugs free-of-charge to those who need them, currently about 160,000 patients.

The free drugs have cut Brazil's death toll from AIDS to levels similar to those in Europe or the U.S. Frank safer-sex campaigns in place for more than a decade have helped keep Brazil's HIV infection rate close to that seen in Western Europe, which is among the lowest in the world.

 

 

GenVec HIV Vaccine in Mid-Stage Trial

Tuesday October 11, 12:31 pm ET

GenVec Says Its Experimental HIV Vaccine Is Starting a Mid-Stage Human Trial

 

GAITHERSBURG, Md. (AP) -- GenVec Inc., a small biotech firm working on drugs for cancer, blood vessel disorders and infectious diseases, said Tuesday that an experimental HIV vaccine it helped develop is beginning mid-stage clinical trials.

Government researchers are conducting the Phase II study, which will enroll 480 healthy subjects to receive either the vaccine or a placebo.

GenVec produced the vaccine under a $50 million subcontract funded by the government's Vaccine Research Center. The product contains DNA segments from three major types of HIV, the virus that causes AIDS.

 

A new step towards an AIDS vaccine

Fri 14 Oct 2005 08:01 am CST
NEW YORK (myDNA News)
 

Progressive disease after HIV infection is inversely correlated with the presence of plasmacytoid dendritic cells (pDCs), a subset of the dendritic cell family and the major producers of type 1 interferon in the body. High numbers of pDCs is related to successful control of HIV. In a paper appearing online on October 13 in advance of print publication of the November issue of the Journal of Clinical Investigation, Nina Bhardwaj and colleagues from New York University report the mechanisms by which HIV-1 activates human pDCs.

The authors show that pDC activation by HIV-1 requires at least two interactions between the cell and virus. Initially, envelope-CD4 interactions mediate the endocytosis of HIV-1. Next, viral nucleic acids, particularly RNA, stimulate pDCs through Toll-like receptors.

A decrease of blood pDC frequency is typically observed in chronic infections due to HIV-1 and correlates with high viral load, reduced CD4 counts and susceptibility to opportunistic infections, and is only partially reverted by anti-retroviral therapy. By identifying the active component of HIV-1 which stimulates pDC function, and consequently other antigen presenting cell function, the authors have recognized an important pathway whereby DC function can be targeted in the design of efficient vaccines or immunotherapies for HIV.

 

FDA mulling approval of at-home AIDS test

Fri 14 Oct 2005 09:59 am CST
WASHINGTON (myDNA News)

The FDA is considering approval of a convenient AIDS screening test that can be utilized within the privacy of one's home.

OraSure Technologies submitted the OraQuick Advance Rapid HIV-1/2 Antibody Test to the Food and Drug Administration in hopes of ending an almost two decades long debate as to whether or not the general public could be responsible for such a device.

The FDA feared that if such a test were available to the public, patients whose tests resulted in a positive diagnosis would consider suicide, as they would not have a licensed physician to help them cope with such a realization. But improved treatment procedures have diminished the belief that contraction of the virus is a "death sentence", and as such, the FDA believes the public could now be adequately prepared for an at-home test.

Previous research estimates that as many as one in four HIV-infected individuals do not know they have contracted the disease.  Individuals comment that they do not seek testing because of privacy concerns, inconvenience, and not wanting to wait a week for test results.  

OraQuick is currently used by licensed physicians, and preliminary results have shown that it is as safe and reliable as blood testing (research estimates the test has an over 99 percent success rate), as well as much more convenient than conventional tests.

All the test requires is an oral swabbing of the gums, and then placing the swab in the recommended slot. Many users liken the ease in which they use the test to that of a pregnancy test.

OraSure's application requests that their product will be sold as over-the-counter, and plan to implement a 24-hour psychological hotline for newly infected patients. While they have not set their price range, OraSure currently sells the test to clinics at a rate of 12 to 17 dollars per unit.

The FDA will hear OraSure's proposal on November 3rd.

 

AIDS, antiretroviral drugs don't halt brain damage


A imaging study carried out at UCLA/University of Pittsburgh for the first time has showen the selective pattern of destruction inflicted by AIDS on brain regions that control motor, language and sensory functions.


High-resolution 3-D color scans created from magnetic resonance images ( MRI ) vividly illustrate the damage.


Published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences ( PNAS ), the research offers a new way to measure the impact of AIDS on the living brain, and reveals that the brain is still vulnerable to infection when patients are receiving highly active antiretroviral therapy ( HAART ).

" Two big surprises came out of this study," explained Paul Thompson, first author and at the David Geffen School of Medicine at UCLA. " First, that AIDS is selective in how it attacks the brain. Second, drug therapy does not appear to slow the damage. The brain provides a sanctuary for HIV where most drugs cannot follow."

Thompson's laboratory used a new 3-D brain-mapping technique developed at UCLA ( University of California – Los Angeles ) to analyze the MRIs of 26 people diagnosed with AIDS, and then compared the scans to those of 14 HIV-negative people. The brain scans measured the thickness of gray matter in various regions of the cerebral cortex.

The University of Pittsburgh diagnosed and scanned the AIDS patients; all 26 subjects had lost at least half of their T-cells, the immune cells targeted by HIV. None had experienced AIDS-related dementia, and 13 were on HAART.

The striking differences between the AIDS patients' and the control subjects' brain scans were easy to see on the detailed 3-D images. Areas of tissue loss glowed red and yellow, while intact regions shone blue and green.

The researchers were surprised to discover that AIDS consistently injured the brain's motor, language and judgment centers, but left other areas alone. Specific patterns of tissue damage directly correlated with patients' physical and mental symptoms, including impaired motor coordination and slowed reflexes.

" The brain scan really catches AIDS red-handed, allowing us to see precisely where the damage is," Thompson observed. " For the first time, we can understand why motor skills deteriorate with AIDS, because the virus attacks the motor centers on top of the brain."

" We saw up to a 15-percent tissue loss in the brain centers that regulate motor skills, such as movement and coordination," added Thompson. " This helps explain the slowed reflexes and disruption of balance and gait that often affect people with early AIDS."

The UCLA team also linked thinning of the language cortex and reasoning center to depletion of T-cells from the immune system. The finding may shed light on why AIDS is often accompanied by mild vocabulary loss, judgment problems and difficulty planning. As the disease advances, these symptoms can worsen into memory loss and dementia similar to Alzheimer's disease.

" Tissue loss follows T-cell loss, meaning that people with poor immune function also show severe brain damage," explained Thompson. " This was a revelation. We used to consider these separate phenomena, because HIV harms the brain and immune system in different ways. Now we see they are intrinsically linked."

" This is an exciting finding, not only because we can now see the effects of HIV/AIDS on the cortex, but also because it reinforces the importance of using sophisticated neuroimaging measurements as biomarkers for the effects of the virus on the brain," said James Becker, at the University of Pittsburgh. " Techniques such as these may also prove useful in evaluating the effects of HIV-medications on the brain."

The researchers were most startled to see no difference in tissue loss between the patients taking HAART and those who were not.

" This was the most terrifying aspect of our findings," said Thompson. " Even though antiretroviral drugs rescue the immune system, AIDS is still stalking the brain. A protective blood barrier prevents drugs from entering the brain, transforming it into a reservoir where HIV can multiply and attack cells unchecked."

The scientists hail brain imaging as a useful method for monitoring AIDS and evaluating new drugs' effect on disease progression. The technique can be powerfully applied to gauge patients' response to therapy, even before the onset of dementia or opportunistic infections.

" Brain mapping can help physicians monitor patients with more accurate detail than they can obtain by counting T-cells," said Thompson. " The scans also can test new drugs' ability to penetrate the brain during clinical trials."

One in 100 people aged 15 to 49 is infected with HIV, the fourth leading cause of death worldwide. In 2004, 40 million people were living with the disease. Forty percent of AIDS patients suffer from progressive neurological symptoms, typically leading to death.

Source: University of California - Los Angeles, 2005


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