(CNN) — A 2-year-old Mississippi girl is the first child to be “functionally cured” of HIV, researchers announced Sunday.
Researchers
said they believe early intervention — in this case within 30 hours of
birth — with three anti-viral drugs was key to the outcome.
A
“functional cure” is when the presence of the virus is so small,
lifelong treatment is not necessary and standard clinical tests cannot
detect the virus in the blood.
The finding was announced at the 2013 Conference on Retroviruses and Opportunistic Infections in Atlanta.
The
unidentified girl was born HIV-positive to a mother who received no
prenatal care and was not diagnosed as HIV-positive herself until just
before delivery.
“We
didn’t have the opportunity to treat the mom during the pregnancy as we
would like to be able do to prevent transmission to the baby,” said Dr.
Hannah Gay.
Gay,
a pediatric HIV specialist at the University of Mississippi Medical
Center, told CNN the timing of intervention in this case, before the
baby was diagnosed HIV-positive, may deserve “more emphasis than the
particular drugs or number of drugs used.”
“We
are hoping that future studies will show that very early institution of
effective therapy will result in this same outcome consistently,” she
said on the eve of the conference.
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