Breakthrough in AIDS?

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Stargazer

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Sep 7, 2003
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I saw this on CNN earlier. A possible breathrough in AIDS research. They have found a way of preventing AIDS from multiplying its cells. I have not found a link yet to the story though.
 
Here you go: Breakthrough May Point To AIDS Vaccine - CBS News

(CBS) Researchers have reported a breakthrough that just might lead them farther down the path to a vaccine for the AIDS virus, according to the Los Angeles Times.

A team based at the Scripps Research Institute discovered a pair of antibodies that can block many strains of the HIV virus from multiplying and producing infections. The antibodies work on a part of the virus that researchers had previously ignored - one that is relatively stable and does not mutate as extensively as others, a characteristic that has frustrated previous attempts at producing a vaccine.

The findings were reported Friday in the journal Science.

Researchers isolated the two antibodies after taking blood samples from 1,800 HIV patients who had demonstrated resistance to serious infections. Those antibodies - called PG9 and PG16 - bind themselves to parts of two proteins on the virus's surface that help it invade cells.

The antibodies neutralized activity in around 75 percent of the HIV virus's 162 strains and could be used to treat those who have developed serious infections.

But the broader goal would be use them as the foundation of a vaccine.

There are currently at least 33 million people infected with HIV around the world, according to the World Health Organization.

© MMIX, CBS Interactive Inc. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
 
So here's the debate, knowing how badly people are about taking their medication on time and finishing the full course of medicinal treatment should the medication be administered by medical personell or by an attached administering device so that as many people are properly treated as possible to minimize the potential for mutation of the part of the virus that is stable?
 
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