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A
potent antibody created in a lab has shown promising results in the first human
trial, a team of US and German scientists announced, suppressing HIV in the
blood for up to a month without harmful side effects.
Dubbed
3BNC117, the molecule was cloned in the lab from a powerful natural antibody
produced by about 1 percent of humans infected with HIV. The results were published Wednesday in the journal Nature.
RT.com report continues:
“What’s special about these antibodies is
that they have activity against over 80 percent of HIV strains and they are
extremely potent,” said Dr. Marina Caskey of the Rockefeller University
in New York, who also led the study.
3BN117
was active against 195 out of 237 HIV strains, the trial showed.
Researchers
administered 3BNC117 to 29 volunteers, 17 with HIV and 12 without. Each
volunteer received a single, intravenous shot in doses ranging from 1 to 30
milligrams per kilogram of body weight, and was monitored for 56 days.
Eight
individuals given the highest dose showed a significant decrease in the amount
of HIV in their blood, “up to 300-fold”
the researchers said. The viral load was lowest after about a week, and
remained “significantly reduced”
for four weeks. In four of the eight high-dose subjects, the viral loads
remained below the starting level after the eight-week trial. The other four, unfortunately,
developed a resistance to the antibody.
According
to the CDC, there are 1.2 million people in the US living with HIV. They rely
on a daily intake of antiretroviral drugs, which can only stop the virus from
replicating, but not cure the infection.
Florian
Klein, immunologist at Rockefeller University in New York and one of the
authors of the study, says the results are promising but 3BNC117 is “not ready to go on the market or anything.”
Caskey says the next step
is to test whether 3BNC117 can help patients during a pause in antiretroviral
therapy and test its function in combination with antiretrovirals. Further
studies of whether 3BNC117 could be used preventatively are also under
consideration.
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