AIDS Weekly Plus

 

2001

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December

AIDS and HIV Transmission: Resistant African Sex Workers May Have Specific Antibody Responses
AIDSWEEKLY Plus; Monday, December 24 & 31, 2001
Michael Greer, Staff Medical Writer
African sex workers who become resistant to HIV infection can develop antibodies that target the virus in vaginal fluid, researchers say.

AIDS and HIV Vaccine: Cytokines Can Alter Efficacy But Not Response Type
AIDSWEEKLY Plus; Monday, December 24 & 31, 2001
Michael Greer, Staff Medical Writer
Cytokines and growth factors can improve the effectiveness of DNA HIV vaccines although they have little effect on the type of induced immune responses, researchers in the United States say.

AIDS and HIV Pathogenesis: Memory T-Cell Populations Affect Viral Load
AIDSWEEKLY Plus; Monday, December 24 & 31, 2001
Michael Greer, Staff Medical Writer
The makeup of antigen-specific memory T-cell populations influences viral load in the acute phase of HIV infection, according to researchers in the United States.

AIDS and HIV Therapy: Interleukin-2 Improves Lymphocyte Function
AIDSWEEKLY Plus; Monday, December 17, 2001
Michael Greer, Staff Medical Writer
The cytokine interleukin (IL)-2 can restore proper lymphocyte function to HIV patients, researchers say.

AIDS and HIV Non-Hodgkin Lymphoma: High-Dose Idarubicin-Based Regimen Effective
AIDSWEEKLY Plus; Monday, December 17, 2001
Michael Greer, Staff Medical Writer
Researchers in Italy have found a chemotherapy regimen that may provide effective treatment for non-Hodgkin lymphoma in AIDS patients.

AIDS and HIV Dementia: Verbal Memory Impaired From Early Infection Stages
AIDSWEEKLY Plus; Monday, December 17, 2001
Michael Greer, Staff Medical Writer
Researchers in the United States have shown that HIV infection produces a marked impairment in verbal cognitive function.

AIDS and HIV Public Health: Syringe Exchanges Are Cost-Effective Means Of Prevention
AIDSWEEKLY Plus; Monday, December 10, 2001
Michael Greer, Staff Medical Writer
A New York-based researcher says that syringe exchange programs are a cost-effective method for containing the spread of HIV infection.

AIDS and HIV Vertical Transmission: Maternal Antiretroviral Resistance Does Not Raise Risk
AIDSWEEKLY Plus; Monday, December 10, 2001
Michael Greer, Staff Medical Writer
Researchers in the United States say that HIV drug resistance mutations do not yet have a significant impact on the chance of maternal transmission.

AIDS and HIV Vaccine: Monoclonal Antibodies Display Mysterious Synergy
AIDSWEEKLY Plus; Monday, December 10, 2001
Michael Greer, Staff Medical Writer
Researchers in the United States and Europe have confirmed that several HIV specific monoclonal antibodies have synergistic effects in combination.

HIV Therapies: Papers Add New Knowledge On HIV's Infection Tactics
AIDSWEEKLY Plus; Monday, December 3, 2001
Staff Medical Writers
In its November 2001 issue, Nature Medicine published three papers that represent great advances in the fight against HIV.

HIV Vaccine: Subtype C SHIV Variant May Be Useful In African Vaccine Development
AIDSWEEKLY Plus; Monday, December 3, 2001
Michael Greer, Staff Medical Writer
Researchers in the United States have developed a simian/human immunodeficiency virus (SHIV) variant for studying potential HIV vaccines tailored to African strains of the virus.

AIDS And HIV Therapy: Novel Technique Developed For Measuring Antiretroviral Toxicity
AIDSWEEKLY Plus; Monday, December 3, 2001
Michael Greer, Staff Medical Writer
Researchers in the United States and Italy have devised a novel method for measuring mitochondrial toxicity caused by antiretroviral HIV drugs.

November

AIDS And HIV Vaccine: Viral Protein Alterations Have Similar Impact On HIV, SHIV Specific Antibodies
AIDSWEEKLY Plus; Monday, November 26, 2001
Michael Greer, Staff Medical Writer
Researchers in New York City have presented evidence in favor of the controversial use of simian/human immunodeficiency virus (SHIV)-based models for HIV vaccine testing.

AIDS And HIV Therapy: Prednisone Ineffective Against Nevirapine-Induced Rash
AIDSWEEKLY Plus; Monday, November 26, 2001
Michael Greer, Staff Medical Writer
Prednisone should not be used to treat rashes induced by the HIV reverse transcriptase inhibitor nevirapine, researchers in Spain warn.

HIV Dementia: P-glycoprotein May Prevent Microglia Exposure To Therapeutic Drugs
AIDSWEEKLY Plus; Monday, November 19, 2001
Michael Greer, Staff Medical Writer
P-glycoprotein appears to block HIV protease inhibitors from reaching viral targets in the brain, according to researchers in Canada.

AIDS And HIV Therapy: DHEA Replacement Therapy Effective
AIDSWEEKLY Plus; Monday, November 19, 2001
Michael Greer, Staff Medical Writer
Treatment with the adrenal hormone DHEA can be beneficial for patients in advanced stages of HIV infection, researchers in France report.

AIDS And HIV Therapies: Spirodiketopiperazine Derivatives Block R5 HIV Infection
AIDSWEEKLY Plus; Monday, November 12, 2001
Michael Greer, Staff Medical Writer
Low-molecular-weight spirodiketopiperazine derivatives can prevent cell entry by R5 strains of HIV, according to researchers in Japan and the United States.

AIDS and HIV Tuberculosis: Longer Treatment Recommended For Coinfected Patients
AIDSWEEKLY Plus; Monday, November 12, 2001
Michael Greer, Staff Medical Writer
Patients coinfected with tuberculosis and HIV have a heightened risk of tuberculosis relapse, researchers in the United States warn.

AIDS and HIV Immunotherapy: Gag-Specific Helper T Cells Aid In Viral Control
AIDSWEEKLY Plus; Monday, November 12, 2001
Michael Greer, Staff Medical Writer
Helper T cells that recognize the HIV Gag protein play a significant role in the body's immune response to the virus, according to researchers in the United States.

October

HIV Coinfection: Hepatitis G Virus Has Protective Effect
AIDSWEEKLY Plus; Monday, October 22 & 29, 2001
Michael Greer, Staff Medical Writer
Patients who are infected with both HIV and the hepatitis G virus fare significantly better than other HIV patients, researchers say.

Epidemiology: Gender Makes A Difference In Risk Of HIV Transmission
AIDSWEEKLY Plus; Monday, October 22 & 29, 2001
Michael Greer, Staff Medical Writer
In heterosexual couples where one partner is HIV positive, viral load, or the amount of detectable virus in the blood, is a much stronger predictor of the risk of transmission in women than in men, according to a study by researchers at the University of Alabama at Birmingham (UAB).

Pathogenesis: Researchers Identify How AIDS Virus Escapes Cells
AIDSWEEKLY Plus; Monday, October 22 & 29, 2001
Staff Medical Writers
Researchers at the University of Utah and Myriad Genetics, Inc., have found how the AIDS virus usurps a cell's normal machinery to leave one cell and infect others - a discovery that eventually could lead to new drugs to control the disease in infected people.

AIDS Therapies: Adefovir Has Limited Effect On Drug Resistance Risk
AIDSWEEKLY Plus; Monday, October 15, 2001
Michael Greer, Staff Medical Writer
The nucleotide analog adefovir dipivoxil (ADV) can affect the frequency of HIV reverse transcriptase mutations conferring increased drug resistance although the impact may not be significant, according to researchers in the United States.

HIV Vaccine: Differences In Infection Routes May Complicate Development
AIDSWEEKLY Plus; Monday, October 15, 2001
Michael Greer, Staff Medical Writer
HIV infection follows different patterns depending on the means of transmission, which need to be taken into account during vaccine studies, researchers in the United States warn.

HIV Resistance: Mutations Causing Partial CCR5 Dysfunction Still Confer Protection
AIDSWEEKLY Plus; Monday, October 15, 2001
Michael Greer, Staff Medical Writer
Researchers in the United States say that genotypes linked to reduced function of the CCR5 coreceptor, used by most HIV strains for cell entry, appear to confer a natural resistance to HIV infection.

Epidemiology: Major AIDS Studies To Increase Minority Enrollment, Answer New Questions
AIDSWEEKLY Plus; Monday, October 8, 2001
Michael Greer, Staff Medical Writer
The National Institutes of Health will increase the number of respondents, as well as minority respondents, to its two most important AIDs surveys to gather contemporary information on infection and treatment.

HIV Vaccines: Shigella-Based Vector Causes Specific Immune Response
AIDSWEEKLY Plus; Monday, October 8, 2001
Michael Greer, Staff Medical Writer
Genetic material from an E. coli-like bacteria and an HIV coat protein can be used to provoke HIV specific immune responses in mice, according to researchers in the United States.

HIV Transmission: Langerhans Cells Express Functional CXCR4
AIDSWEEKLY Plus; Monday, October 8, 2001
Michael Greer, Staff Medical Writer
Human Langerhans cells express a functional HIV coreceptor, a finding that may help clarify the mechanisms of HIV transmission, according to researchers in France.

September

Epidemiology: HIV Drug Resistance Isn't Due To Drug-Resistant Strains, Scientists Say
AIDSWEEKLY Plus; Monday, September 17 & 24, 2001
Staff Medical Writers
The number of drug-resistant HIV cases has already reached epidemic proportions in San Francisco, but transmission of drug-resistant strains is not to blame, reports a new UCLA/UCSF study in the September 2001 issue of Nature Medicine

AIDS Therapies: Indinavir-Ritonavir Treatment May Cause Ingrown Toenails
AIDSWEEKLY Plus; Monday, September 17 & 24, 2001
Michael Greer, Staff Medical Writer
Researchers in Delaware warn that severe cases of ingrown toenails have been observed in HIV patients treated with indinavir (IDV) and ritonavir (RTV).

HIV Complications: Cesarean Section Safe For Infected Mothers
AIDSWEEKLY Plus; Monday, September 17 & 24, 2001
Michael Greer, Staff Medical Writer
Women infected with HIV can undergo cesarean sections without an undue risk of severe complications, researchers in South Africa report.

Disease Resistance: People Heterozygous For Gene Mutation May Be Partially Resistant To HIV
AIDSWEEKLY Plus; Monday, September 10, 2001
Staff Medical Writers
Scientists have found that people who carry one copy of a mutation that protects cells against HIV infection may be partially resistant to the virus.

Diagnostics: False-Positive Epstein-Barr Antibody Test Results Reported In Patients With Primary HIV Infection
AIDSWEEKLY Plus; Monday, September 10, 2001
Staff Medical Writers
Physicians with high-risk patients who present with symptoms of acute Epstein-Barr virus infection (or infectious mononucleosis) should consider a diagnosis of human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) infection, according to a clinical study published in the August 15, 2001, issue of the American Journal of Medicine.

AIDS Therapies: Once-Daily Antiretroviral Regimen Safe, Effective
AIDSWEEKLY Plus; Monday, September 10, 2001
Michael Greer, Staff Medical Writer
Researchers in California say that an antiretroviral regimen consisting of four medications taken once a day can provide safe and effective control of HIV infection.

Non-Hodgkin Lymphoma: Cerebrospinal Fluid CD23 Levels Can Mark AIDS-Related Disease
AIDSWEEKLY Plus; Monday, September 3, 2001
Michael Greer, Staff Medical Writer
Levels of soluble CD23 in the cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) of AIDS patients can be used to diagnose AIDS-related non-Hodgkin lymphoma that has spread to the brain and/or nervous system, researchers in Europe report.

HIV Complications: Puberty Delayed In Perinatally Infected Children
AIDSWEEKLY Plus; Monday, September 3, 2001
Michael Greer, Staff Medical Writer
Health care workers providing treatment for adolescents infected with HIV at birth may need to deal with psychological issues stemming from delayed puberty, researchers in Italy say.

AIDS Therapies: Some Groups Have Benefited Less From Antiretroviral Therapy
AIDSWEEKLY Plus; Monday, September 3, 2001
Michael Greer, Staff Medical Writer
Potent antiretroviral therapy has benefited some demographic groups of HIV patients more than others, researchers in Maryland report.

August

Pathogenesis: Study Finds HIV Requires Cholesterol To Infect
AIDSWEEKLY Plus; Monday, August 20 & 27, 2001
Michael Greer, Staff Medical Writer
Cholesterol is instrumental in HIV's ability to infiltrate cells, and removing this fatty material from a cell's membrane blocks infection, according to a Johns Hopkins study reported in the July 20, 2001, issue of AIDS Research and Human Retroviruses.

Disease Prevention: Sexual Transmission Of HIV May Be Significantly Reduced By Three OTC Lubricants
AIDSWEEKLY Plus; Monday, August 20 & 27, 2001
Michael Greer, Staff Medical Writer
In preliminary laboratory studies, researchers at the University of Texas Medical Branch at Galveston (UTMB) have found what could prove to be a slick new weapon in the battle against AIDS: over-the-counter sexual lubricants.

AIDS Therapies: Antiretroviral Treatment Effective Even Against Advanced Disease
AIDSWEEKLY Plus; Monday, August 20 & 27, 2001
Michael Greer, Staff Medical Writer
Researchers in the United States have shown that highly active antiretroviral therapy (HAART) reduces the risk of AIDS-related complications and death, even for patients in the advanced stages of the illness.

AIDS Therapies: Structured Drug Holidays Can Increase Viral Presence In Spinal Fluid
AIDSWEEKLY Plus; Monday, August 6, 2001
Michael Greer, Staff Medical Writer
Planned treatment interruptions after failed antiretroviral therapy for HIV infection can lead to an increase in the cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) viral population, researchers in California claim.

AIDS Therapies: Intermittent Detectable HIV Levels Do Not Predict Treatment Failure
AIDSWEEKLY Plus; Monday, August 6, 2001
Prepared by Staff Medical Writers
HIV patients who receive triple-drug therapy to suppress viral levels below the limit of detection frequently experience intermittently detectable HIV RNA in blood plasma, but this does not predict subsequent virologic failure, researchers say.

Public Health: Few Young Gay Males Avail Themselves of Hepatitis B Vaccine
AIDSWEEKLY Plus; Monday, August 6, 2001
Sonia Nichols, Staff Medical Writer
Even though a hepatitis B vaccine has been available for almost 20 years, the vaccination rate in young gay males is still falling short, researchers at the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention report.

July

AIDS Therapies: Indinavir Impairs Early Adipocyte Differentiation
AIDSWEEKLY Plus; Monday, July 23 & 30, 2001
Michael Greer, Staff Medical Writer
The HIV protease inhibitor indinavir blocks the differentiation of fat cell precursors into mature cells by interfering with the activity of a crucial regulatory protein, researchers in France say.

HIV Vaccines: First Trinidadian Volunteer Injected With Experimental Combination
AIDSWEEKLY Plus; Monday, July 23 & 30, 2001
Staff Medical Writers
Researchers testing an experimental HIV vaccine have injected the first of 40 volunteers in Trinidad for a study sponsored by a U.S. health agency and the French and U.S. manufacturers.

Adverse Drug Reactions: Drug In AIDS Regimen May Cause Liver Damage
AIDSWEEKLY Plus; Monday, July 23 & 30, 2001
Sonia Bell-Nichols, Senior Medical Writer
A European study indicates the drug nevirapine, used in AIDS regimens, may cause liver problems, especially in patients with poor liver function, coinfected with hepatitis C virus (HCV), or who have taken other antiretroviral drugs.

AIDS Therapies: Foscarnet Prodrugs Can Reverse Viral Drug Resistance
AIDSWEEKLY Plus; Monday, July 9, 2001
Michael Greer, Staff Medical Writer
Modified versions of the HIV drug foscarnet are effective against drug-resistance viral variants and can even reverse the effects of some resistance-conferring mutations, researchers in the United States report.

Breastfeeding: Study Cites Danger For HIV+ Mothers And Their Children
AIDSWEEKLY Plus; Monday, July 9, 2001
Michael Greer, Staff Medical Writer
Physicians have long suspected that breastfeeding by HIV positive mothers poses substantial health risks to children. However, researchers in Kenya have shown that breastfeeding may be dangerous to infected women as well.

AIDS Therapies: Antiretroviral Therapy Improves CD8 Cell Diversity
AIDSWEEKLY Plus; Monday, July 9, 2001
Michael Greer, Staff Medical Writer
Highly active antiretroviral therapy for HIV infection improves the number of circulating cytotoxic T lymphocyte subsets, immunologists report.

June

AIDS Therapies: Nelfinavir Desensitization Possible
AIDSWEEKLY Plus; Monday, June 25, 2001
Michael Greer, Staff Medical Writer
HIV patients who suffer from severe rashes after nelfinavir treatment can be desensitized to the protease inhibitor as with other allergens, researchers in Georgia report.

HIV Pathogenesis: Deadly Assault On Immune Cells Chronicled In Step-By-Step Account Of Viral Invasion
AIDSWEEKLY Plus; Monday, June 25, 2001
Staff Medical Writers
Using sophisticated post-genomic technology, a team of researchers has looked deep within the body's immune cells and recorded the molecular events triggered by invasion of the human immunodeficiency virus (HIV), creating a detailed account of the devastating progression of cellular injury following HIV infection.

AIDS Therapies: Study Finds Saquinavir Inferior To Other Protease Inhibitors
AIDSWEEKLY Plus; Monday, June 25, 2001
Michael Greer, Staff Medical Writer
The protease inhibitor saquinavir appears to provide less control of HIV infection than its cousins do, researchers in Europe report.

HIV Resistance: Homozygosity For HLA Allele Confers Protection
AIDSWEEKLY Plus; Monday, June 18, 2001
Michael Greer, Staff Medical Writer
HIV patients homozygous for a class of human leukocyte antigen (HLA)-B alleles display natural suppression of viral replication and resistance to AIDS progression, researchers report.

Immunology: Drug-Resistant HIV Allows Body To Continue Producing Virus-Fighting Cells
AIDSWEEKLY Plus; Monday, June 18, 2001
Staff Medical Writers
HIV that has become resistant to powerful drugs called protease inhibitors may not be a dire sign of decline after all, researchers from the Gladstone Institute of Virology and Immunology at the University of California, San Francisco, have shown.

AIDS Therapies: WHO Adopts Weakened Statement
AIDSWEEKLY Plus; Monday, June 18, 2001
Michael Greer, Staff Medical Writer


HIV/AIDS Treatment: Survey Finds Specialists More Likely To Recommend Appropriate Care
AIDSWEEKLY Plus; Monday, June 11, 2001
Staff Medical Writers
Generalist physicians and those with little experience caring for HIV/AIDS patients need expert advice for the increasingly complex process of treating them, suggest the results of a survey of physicians in California, Florida, Massachusetts, and New York.

Pathogenesis: Patients May Be Most Infectious During Primary HIV Infection
AIDSWEEKLY Plus; Monday, June 11, 2001
Staff Medical Writers
Scientists have discovered high levels of HIV in the saliva, spinal fluid, semen and vaginal fluid, as well as in the blood, of patients newly infected by the virus. They believe their work suggests an important strategy for curbing the worldwide epidemic.

AIDS Therapies: Cross-Tolerance Risk Depends On Protease Inhibitor
AIDSWEEKLY Plus; Monday, June 11, 2001
Michael Greer, Staff Medical Writer
Some protease inhibitors are much more likely to induce HIV susceptibility to their cousins after unsuccessful use, according to AIDS researchers in California.

Pharmacogenetics: Proteins In African HIV Strains Interact Differently With Drugs
AIDSWEEKLY Plus; Monday, June 4, 2001
Michael Greer, Staff Medical Writer
Naturally-occurring genetic variations in HIV-A and HIV-C, the two subtypes of HIV prevalent in Africa, make it harder for inhibitory drugs to bind to the protease, a key protein involved in viral maturation, according to a new report by biologists in The Krieger School of Arts and Sciences of The Johns Hopkins University.

AIDS Therapies: Genotypic-Resistance Testing Effective
AIDSWEEKLY Plus; Monday, June 4, 2001
Michael Greer, Staff Medical Writer
Genotypic-resistance testing (GRT) can successfully point doctors to effective antiretroviral drugs for HIV treatment, according to researchers in Germany.

Pediatrics: Young HIV Patients At Risk For Enlarged Aortic Root
AIDSWEEKLY Plus; Monday, June 4, 2001
Michael Greer, Staff Medical Writer
Children infected with HIV are at risk for enlargement of the aortic root, a problem becoming more prevalent as new treatments prolong their lives, Mt. Sinai Medical Center researchers warn.

May

AIDS Therapies: Ritonavir Doesn't Help Saquinavir Penetrate Sanctuary Sites
AIDSWEEKLY Plus; Monday, May 21, 2001
Michael Greer, Staff Medical Writer
Combining ritonavir with saquinavir does not give the HIV drugs access to areas blocked by P-glycoprotein (P-gp), researchers in the Netherlands say.

Immunology: HIV Epitopes Found In Persistently Seronegative Sex Workers Could Aid Vaccine Development
AIDSWEEKLY Plus; Monday, May 21, 2001
Michael Greer, Staff Medical Writer
An ideal AIDS vaccine might be one that stimulates the cellular immune system so efficiently that, despite repeated exposure to HIV, an individual never shows signs of viremia or even seroconverts against HIV epitopes.

HIV Virology: Sequences Inhibiting Surface Env Expression Found
AIDSWEEKLY Plus; Monday, May 21, 2001
Michael Greer, Staff Medical Writer
Researchers in Germany have discovered a pair of motifs in HIV's cytoplasmic tail that suppress surface expression of the Env protein.

Disease Progression: Overweight May Slow Onset Of Full-Blown AIDS
AIDSWEEKLY Plus; Monday, May 14, 2001
Michael Greer, Staff Medical Writer
Gaining a few extra pounds may help prevent the progression of HIV to full-blown AIDS, although the reasons are still unclear.

Virology: Mutant HIV Strains Retain Fitness Despite Reduced Function
AIDSWEEKLY Plus; Monday, May 14, 2001
Michael Greer, Staff Medical Writer
Drug-resistant HIV strains remain dangerous even when mutations seem to degrade their ability to proliferate, researchers in Switzerland warn.

HIV Vaccines: AIDSVAX Shows Continuing Safety Profile
AIDSWEEKLY Plus; Monday, May 14, 2001
Prepared by AIDS Weekly editors from staff and other reports
The independent organization that is overseeing the final-stage clinical trials VaxGen, Inc.'s preventive AIDSVAX vaccine indicated, once again, that the product appears safe and that the trials are being conducted appropriately.

AIDS Therapies: Effective Dose Range For Once-Daily Protease Inhibitor Determined
AIDSWEEKLY Plus; Monday, May 7, 2001
Michael Greer, Staff Medical Writer
Further study of the Bristol-Myers Squibb's once-daily anti-HIV compound BMS-232632 has determined effective concentrations of the drug designed to ease patients' rigorous dose schedules.

At-Risk Populations: Many Heterosexuals Are Unaware Of HIV Risk Factors And Their Partner's HIV Status
AIDSWEEKLY Plus; Monday, May 7, 2001
Michael Greer, Staff Medical Writer
Many adults are unaware of their partner's HIV status and HIV risks, suggest the results of a study of heterosexuals with AIDS.

AIDS Therapies: Zidovudine Derivative Much More Potent Than Parent Compound
AIDSWEEKLY Plus; Monday, May 7, 2001
Michael Greer, Staff Medical Writer
Researchers in France say that a derivative of the antiretroviral HIV drug zidovudine, better known as AZT, is many times more powerful than the original.

April

Epidemiology: African HIV-1 Epidemic Not Caused By More Infectious Viral Subtype
AIDSWEEKLY Plus; Monday, April 23, 2001
Michael Greer, Staff Medical Writer
The explosive HIV-1 epidemic in sub-Saharan Africa is unlikely to be the result of a viral subtype with increased infectivity, according to the results of a study published in the April 14, 2001, issue of the Lancet.

HIV Pathogenesis: HIV Nef Protein Plays Both Offense And Defense In Battle Between HIV And Body's Immune System
AIDSWEEKLY Plus; Monday, April 23, 2001
Michael Greer, Staff Medical Writer
In fighting the body's immune system, HIV owes part of its success to its ability to destroy those cells normally recruited to mount the body's counter-attack against the HIV infected cells. Lying at the crux of such success is a viral protein called Nef, which protects its infected host while simultaneously destroying the neighboring uninfected cells of the immune system, according to scientists at the Gladstone Institute of Virology and Immunology.

HIV Vaccines: Clinical Trials Appropriate For High-Risk Cohorts In U.S.
AIDSWEEKLY Plus; Monday, April 23, 2001
N.R. Saltmarsh, Staff Medical Writer
A prospective study of human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) incidence among high-risk cohorts lends support to the idea that HIV-1 vaccine trials would be appropriate and welcomed in these populations in the United States.

AIDS Therapies: Abacavir Equivalent To Indinavir For Patients With Moderate Viral Loads
AIDSWEEKLY Plus; Monday, April 16, 2001
Michael Greer, Staff Medical Writer
For patients with low or moderate HIV loads, the nucleoside analog abacavir is as effective as the protease inhibitor indinavir as part of an antiretroviral cocktail, researchers in Germany report.

AIDS Therapies: Antiretroviral Drugs Can Alter Predominant Viral Strains
AIDSWEEKLY Plus; Monday, April 16, 2001
Michael Greer, Staff Medical Writer
Antiretroviral therapy changes the predominant viral phenotype in HIV patients by repressing the more virulent strain found in end-stage disease, researchers in New York report.

Opportunistic Infections: Antiretroviral Therapy Reduces Need For Prophylactic Treatment
AIDSWEEKLY Plus; Monday, April 16, 2001
Michael Greer, Staff Medical Writer
The advent of potent antiretroviral therapy for HIV infection has reduced - and possibly eliminated - the need for opportunistic infection prophylaxis, researchers in California argue.

AIDS Therapies: Antibody 17b May Hold Key To Blocking Viral Entry
AIDSWEEKLY Plus; Monday, April 9, 2001
Michael Greer, Staff Medical Writer
The mechanisms by which the HIV antibody 17b interferes with viral cell entry may aid in the creation of new HIV inhibitors, say researchers in Pennsylvania.

HIV Pathogenesis: CD4-Independent Mutants More Susceptible To Neutralization
AIDSWEEKLY Plus; Monday, April 9, 2001
Michael Greer, Staff Medical Writer
HIV variants that do not need the presence of CD4 for cell entry are less resistant to immune activity than the normal virus, which may account the rarity of such strains, researchers report.

AIDS Therapies: Novel Compound Inhibits HIV Replication In Cell Cultures
AIDSWEEKLY Plus; Monday, April 9, 2001
This article was prepared by AIDS Weekly editors from staff and other reports.
A compound that inhibits human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) in human immune system cells may eventually provide a new therapeutic approach against the virus by blocking infection at an early stage.

AIDS Therapise: Postexposure Prophylaxis Feasible And Effective
AIDSWEEKLY Plus; Monday, April 2, 2001
Michael Greer, Staff Medical Writer
Researchers in California say that postexposure prophylaxis (PEP) - treatment given to prevent HIV infection after possible exposure - can help prevent the spread of HIV and AIDS.

Pathogenesis: Monkeys Don't Develop AIDS Despite High Virus Levels
AIDSWEEKLY Plus; Monday, April 2, 2001
This article was prepared by AIDS Weekly editors from staff and other reports
African green monkeys do not develop AIDS despite high levels of the simian immunodeficiency virus (SIV) in their blood.

AIDS Therapies: Four-Drug Antiretroviral Regimen Effective For Amprenavir-Experienced Patients
AIDSWEEKLY Plus; Monday, April 2, 2001
Michael Greer, Staff Medical Writer
An antiretroviral cocktail combining indinavir, nevirapine, stavudine, and lamivudine can provide substantial viral inhibition in amprenavir-experienced patients, Cornell University researchers report.

March

Education and Prevention: Risky Behavior And Misconceptions Common In Russia
AIDSWEEKLY Plus; Monday, March 26, 2001
Michael Greer, Staff Medical Writer
AIDS researchers in Wisconsin are alarmed by widespread high-risk sexual behavior in Russia, which they say is accompanied by equally widespread misinformation about HIV transmission.

AIDS Therapies: Chloroquine Can Be Effective Option For Patients In Poor Countries
AIDSWEEKLY Plus; Monday, March 26, 2001
Michael Greer, Staff Medical Writer
Chloroquine, commonly used as a treatment for malaria, may also help solve the problem of finding effective HIV drugs affordable for developing countries.

Diagnostics: DNA Assays Can Miss Some Viral Subtypes
AIDSWEEKLY Plus; Monday, March 26, 2001
Michael Greer, Staff Medical Writer
Without supplementary primers, some DNA polymerase chain reaction (PCR) HIV tests can fail to detect some subtypes of the virus, researchers in Denmark say.

HIV Vaccines: New Prime-Boost Strategy Shows Promise In Monkeys
AIDSWEEKLY Plus; Monday, March 19, 2001
This article was prepared by AIDS Weekly editors from staff and other reports
A team of academic and government researchers in the United States has reported on a promising new "prime-boost" HIV vaccine approach that is currently on a development fast-track for human clinical trials.

AIDS Therapies: Researchers Warn Against Amprenavir Combinations In HIV/MAC Coinfected Patients
AIDSWEEKLY Plus; Monday, March 19, 2001
This article was prepared by AIDS Weekly editors from staff and other reports
Neither rifabutin nor rifampin should be used to prevent Mycobacterium avium complex (MAC) in HIV patients treated with the protease inhibitor amprenavir, researchers warn.

AIDS Therapies: Antiretroviral Failure After Pretreatment Linked To HIV Mutations
AIDSWEEKLY Plus; Monday, March 19, 2001
Michael Greer, Staff Medical Writer
Extensive pretreatment can induce HIV mutations that render antiretroviral therapy permanently ineffective, researchers in France caution.

Pathogenesis: Specific Immune Response May Underlie Neonatal Resistance to HIV
AIDSWEEKLY Plus; Monday, March 12, 2001
Michael Greer, Staff Medical Writer
Newborns who remain uninfected despite maternal HIV exposure show specific immune cell responses to the virus, researchers say.

AIDS Therapies: Efavirenz Levels Predict Poor Treatment Outcome
AIDSWEEKLY Plus; Monday, March 12, 2001
Michael Greer, Staff Medical Writer
Monitoring blood levels of the HIV drug efavirenz is worthwhile, as they often portend the outcome of treatment, researchers in Switzerland say.

Pathogenesis: Monocytes Harbor HIV During HAART Treatments
AIDSWEEKLY Plus; Monday, March 12, 2001
Michael Greer, Staff Medical Writer
Another type of white blood cell has been found to provide a safe haven for HIV during highly active antiretroviral therapy (HAART), researchers in Australia report.

AIDS Therapies: Protease Inhibitor Interferes With Fat-Cell Development
AIDSWEEKLY Plus; Monday, March 5, 2001
Michael Greer, Staff Medical Writer
The protease inhibitor nelfinavir interferes with fat-cell development, which could be a cause for wasting syndrome.

AIDS Therapies: Patients With Drug-Resistant HIV Still Show Significant Benefit From Continuing Treatment
AIDSWEEKLY Plus; Monday, March 5, 2001
Michael Greer, Staff Medical Writer
Many patients continue to derive immunologic and clinical benefit from antiretroviral therapy even after drug resistance emerges, according to researchers from the University of California, San Francisco.

AIDS Therapies: Abacavir Can Be Effective Addition To Pediatric Treatments
AIDSWEEKLY Plus; Monday, March 5, 2001
Michael Greer, Staff Medical Writer
The drug abacavir can safely increase the potency of combination treatments for HIV positive children who have shown resistance to other therapies, pediatricians say.

February

AIDS Therapies: Nevirapine Can Be Safe, Effective for Salvage Treatment
AIDSWEEKLY Plus; Monday, February 19, 2001
Michael Greer, Staff Medical Writer
The reverse transcriptase inhibitor nevirapine can be safely and effectively used as a salvage therapy for HIV patients who have shown resistance to other antiviral treatments, according to researchers in The Netherlands.

AIDS Therapies: HIV Mutants Show Resistance to Antiretroviral Treatment
AIDSWEEKLY Plus; Monday, February 19, 2001
Michael Greer, Staff Medical Writer
Virologists in The Netherlands warn that new HIV mutants refractory to treatment with nucleoside analogs may threaten the future effectiveness of such remedies.

AIDS Therapies: Monoclonal Antibodies May Effectively Inhibit HIV
AIDSWEEKLY Plus; Monday, February 19, 2001
Michael Greer, Staff Medical Writer
Researchers in New York have shown that monoclonal antibodies targeting the crucial CCR5 co-receptor can potently and selectively block HIV infection, to an even higher degree than some natural CCR5 ligands.

AIDS Therapies: Protease Inhibitor-Induced Hyperlipidemia Caused by Increased Production
AIDSWEEKLY Plus; Monday, February 12, 2001
Michael Greer, Staff Medical Writer
Biologists in the United States have presented evidence implicating the liver in the excessive lipid levels induced by commonly used treatments for HIV infection.

Transmission: Molecules Inhibit HIV Protease
AIDSWEEKLY Plus; Monday, February 12, 2001
Michael Greer, Staff Medical Writer
Researchers have identified a molecule with the ability to inhibit a key enzyme of HIV, which could limit the spread of the virus.

AIDS Therapies: Pertussis Toxin Binding Subunit Blocks HIV Replication
AIDSWEEKLY Plus; Monday, February 12, 2001
Michael Greer, Staff Medical Writer
The toxin responsible for whooping cough in children may soon be pressed into service as a potent inhibitor of HIV replication, researchers report.

Adverse Drug Effects: Severe Hyperlactatemia a Potentially Fatal Side Effect
AIDSWEEKLY Plus; Monday, February 5, 2001
Michael Greer, Staff Medical Writer
A small but significant proportion of HIV positive patients treated with antiretroviral therapy will develop life-threatening hyperlactatemia, which may be the result of treatment-induced mitochondrial damage, researchers in France report.

Disease Progression: HIV-1 Nef Protein Induces Shift from Macrophage-Tropic to T-Cell-Tropic Infection
AIDSWEEKLY Plus; Monday, February 5, 2001
Michael Greer, Staff Medical Writer
HIV-1 Nef protein, by inducing resistance to macrophage-tropic HIV infection in monocyte-derived macrophages (MDMs), triggers the shift to T-cell-tropic infection portending progression to full-blown AIDS, virologists report.

AIDS Therapies: Once-Daily Dosing Regimen Possible
AIDSWEEKLY Plus; Monday, February 5, 2001
Michael Greer, Staff Medical Writer
Researchers in Spain have shown that effective once-a-day dosing regimens are possible for antiretroviral drugs, a finding which may help health care workers increase patient compliance with therapy.

January

AIDS Therapies: Time Frame for Success of HAART Therapy Examined
AIDSWEEKLY Plus; Monday, January 29, 2001
Prepared by AIDS Weekly editors from staff and other reports
Pathologists in the United States have attempted to clarify the time scale required for anti-retroviral treatments to significantly reduce the plasma levels of HIV-1 in children.

AIDS Therapies: Cellular Fusion Inhibitors Show Promise
AIDSWEEKLY Plus; Monday, January 29, 2001
Prepared by AIDS Weekly editors from staff and other reports
Recent research into the process of HIV cell fusion may lead to novel therapies for inhibiting or shutting down that process, researchers suggest in the journal Expert Opinion on Therapeutic Patents.

HIV Vaccines: Preclinical Testing of Nigerian Formulation Begins
AIDSWEEKLY Plus; Monday, January 29, 2001
Prepared by AIDS Weekly editors from staff and other reports
Research parasitologist Simon Agwale, at the University of Maryland Biotechnology Institute (UMBI), reported at a workshop held in Abuja, Nigeria, that he and his colleagues have developed an experimental HIV-1 vaccine, tailored specifically to help fight AIDS in his native Nigeria.

HIV Pathogenesis: In vivo Findings Suggests New Model of HIV-1 Nef Protein Downregulation of CD4
AIDSWEEKLY Plus; Monday, January 22, 2001
Prepared by AIDS Weekly editors from staff and other reports
Gladstone Institute, San Francisco, researchers have developed a new in vivo co-immunoprecipitation assay to investigate the mechanism by which the HIV-1 Nef protein binds to CD4 cells.

Education: AIDS Awareness Focus of Efforts in India
AIDSWEEKLY Plus; Monday, January 22, 2001
Prepared by AIDS Weekly editors from staff and other reports
AIDS awareness was a topic of study discussed at the 49th Annual Meeting of the American Society of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene, held in Houston, Texas, in 2000.

HIV Pathogenesis: New Protein Thwarts HIV Attachment
AIDSWEEKLY Plus; Monday, January 22, 2001
Prepared by AIDS Weekly editors from staff and other reports
Researchers have synthesized a protein that jams the "grappling hook" that HIV uses to attach to target cells.

Myocardial Dysfunction: Potential Mechanism Revealed
AIDSWEEKLY Plus; Monday, January 15, 2001
Prepared by AIDS Weekly editors from staff and other reports
The effects of HIV glycoprotein120 (gp120) on cardiac myocytes may contribute to myocardial dysfunction in HIV patients.

Occupational Risk: Severe Adverse Effects Reported from Post-HIV-Exposure Nevirapine Prophylaxis
AIDSWEEKLY Plus; Monday, January 15, 2001
Prepared by AIDS Weekly editors from staff and other reports
At least 22 people have suffered serious side effects, including liver failure, from taking an AIDS drug that was prescribed to prevent HIV infection in people accidentally exposed to the virus.

Co-Infection (HCV/HIV): Tailor-Made Interferon Treatments Fail
AIDSWEEKLY Plus; Monday, January 15, 2001
Prepared by AIDS Weekly editors from staff and other reports
Trying to adjust interferon (IFN) treatment doses to fit hepatitis C viral load in HIV patients just doesn't work, researchers in Italy say.

HIV Vaccines: Characteristics of Vaccine Preparedness Cohorts Described
AIDSWEEKLY Plus; Monday, January 8, 2001
Prepared by AIDS Weekly editors from staff and other reports
Data from the HIV Prevention Trials Unit of the University of Washington indicate that chances to treat HIV patients early or to prevent HIV infection in at-risk individuals frequently are missed.

Regulatory Issues: First-Ever U.S. Standards Established to Protect Personal Medical Records
AIDSWEEKLY Plus; Monday, January 8, 2001
Prepared by AIDS Weekly editors from staff and other reports
U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) secretary Donna E. Shalala on December 20, 2000, released the first-ever U.S. federal standards for protecting the privacy of Americans' personal health records.

Drug Resistance: Phenotypic Testing Can Predict HIV Treatment Failure at Low Viral Loads
AIDSWEEKLY Plus; Monday, January 8, 2001
Prepared by AIDS Weekly editors from staff and other reports
A study published in the December 22, 2000, issue of AIDS demonstrated for the first time that phenotypic HIV drug resistance testing can detect the emergence of drug resistance prior to a significant increase in viral load in patients undergoing antiretroviral therapy.


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