Salad

‘Oslo patient’ likely cured of HIV after getting stem cell transplant from his brother, who is genetically resistant to the virus

A 63-year-old man known as the Oslo patient is “likely cured” of HIV after a stem-cell transplant remodeled his entire immune system.

Prior to this case, a handful of other HIV patients who received similar transplants had entered long-term remission from the infection. In those cases, the donated cells came from people unrelated to the patients, but in the Oslo patient’s case, the transplanted cells came from his brother. His sibling happened to carry a genetic mutation that made him resistant to HIV, doctors reported Monday (April 13) in the journal Nature Microbiology.

Related posts

Stone Age boy in Sweden was buried in deerskin and a woodpecker headdress, archaeologists discover

sys.admin

Science news this week: Artemis II lifts off, diabetes cured in mice, and smog in China shapes Arctic storms

sys.admin

‘The brain consistently moved upward and backward’: Astronauts’ brains physically shift in their heads during spaceflight

sys.admin

Leave a Comment