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<text id=93TT1205>
<title>
Mar. 22, 1993: Are Some People Immune to AIDS?
</title>
<history>
TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1993
Mar. 22, 1993 Can Animals Think
</history>
<article>
<source>Time Magazine</source>
<hdr>
MEDICINE, Page 49
Are Some People Immune to AIDS?
</hdr>
<body>
<p>An amazing group of men, who have thrived with HIV for more
than a decade, may reveal how to beat it
</p>
<p>By CHRISTINE GORMAN
</p>
<p> Anyone who thinks that being infected with HIV amounts to
an automatic death sentence should talk to Rob Anderson. The
39-year-old San Francisco artist has beaten the odds against him
by living--no, thriving--with the virus that causes AIDS for
14 years. At 6 ft. 2 in. and 170 lbs., Anderson has only routine
medical complaints: the stuffiness of an occasional head cold
or the aches and pains of a flu. His good health is not the work
of some miracle drug: he has never taken AZT or any other
compound to fight HIV. Incredible as it sounds, Anderson's own
immune system seems to have held the villainous virus at bay.
"It feels good to be on the winning side of HIV," he says.
Looking to the future with surprisingly little fear, he hopes
to fix up the crumbling Victorian house that he shares with his
HIV-negative companion of 10 years.
</p>
<p> Does Anderson have a natural immunity to AIDS? Just a few
years ago, the idea would have seemed absurd. But that was
before the results started coming in from a group of long-term
health studies of 10,000 gay men, begun in the late 1970s to
mid-1980s. Scientists, prodded by AIDS activists who wanted to
"study the healthy" and to lift the shadows of doom that
surround the disease, have now documented at least 70 cases like
Anderson's. Researchers are also beginning to find similarly
healthy, long-lived survivors among women and children with HIV.
There is now good reason to hope that at least 5% of the
estimated 1 million Americans infected with the virus may never
come down with the disease.
</p>
<p> It sounds like the most morbid of questions to ask of a
patient: "Why aren't you dead yet--or even sick?" Looking for
the answers may prove to be one of the most productive avenues
of research in the battle against AIDS. By shifting their focus
to the healthy, many researchers believe they can make dramatic
improvements in the treatment of everyone who is infected with
HIV--whether ailing or not. Just as important, their work
could channel the scattershot search for a vaccine into new and
more promising directions. "Early in the epidemic we thought
everyone who got infected died," says Dr. Lewis Schrager of the
National Institutes of Health. "And that still may be true. But
I'm becoming convinced that there is something about these
people who are not progressing to AIDS that is worth intensive
investigation."
</p>
<p> Resistance to HIV does not seem to be the same as more
common examples of immunity. The body's protective
countermeasures against measles and mumps are absolute. Years
after exposure, there is no hint within the body of the foreign
agents that cause those diseases. After children become immune
to mumps, they can no longer infect other people.
</p>
<p> That is not the case for healthy HIV survivors, no matter
how wholesome their glow. They test positive for antibodies to
HIV and small amounts of virus can be detected in their blood.
Although stable, their immune systems show telltale signs of
having been weakened by the infection--not enough to make them
sick but enough to register on blood tests. "We don't know how
infectious these people are," says Dr. Susan Buchbinder of the
San Francisco Department of Public Health. "But we have to
assume that they can pass on the virus."
</p>
<p> So why aren't they sick? Clinicians and researchers have
poked, prodded, questioned and bled their healthy human guinea
pigs four to six times a year every year in search of any
relevant information. Last month the NIH held its first
scientific conference to evaluate the mounting evidence. So far,
success in fighting HIV does not appear to be closely linked to
good diets, the lack of drug use or stress or the absence of
other sexually transmitted diseases. Finding no simple patterns,
researchers are zeroing in on the men's individual immune
responses, even searching through their genetic makeups for the
reasons behind their special status. Thanks to advances that
have been made in molecular biology and immunology since the
start of the AIDS epidemic, scientists have found some
tantalizing clues.
</p>
<p> Their investigation begins with a white blood cell called
CD4. It is the linchpin of the immune system and the main
target of HIV. As a general rule, people who become infected by
HIV suffer a drop in their CD4 count from a normal level of
about 1,200 cells per 1/1000th of a mL of blood to 500 cells or
less. The risk of developing one or more of the illnesses
associated with AIDS rises dramatically if the CD4 count drops
below 200.
</p>
<p> One of the most striking things about the healthy
survivors is that after the initial drop, their CD4 count
stabilizes--usually above 500. Assaulted but not overwhelmed,
they no longer lose any ground against HIV. One possible
explanation is that these men were exposed to a strain of the
virus that is naturally weaker than most. The immune system
subdues the less malevolent virus, allowing the body to fend off
any new attacks by more dangerous strains. In the same way,
English milkmaids who suffered from cowpox in the 18th century
developed an immunity to the disease that also protected them
against its more lethal cousin, smallpox. After studying these
women in 1796, Edward Jenner developed his smallpox vaccine.
</p>
<p> Investigators are also excited by the possibility that
some of the HIV survivors' immune systems are cannier than a
chess master. They apparently do not allow their opponent much
freedom of movement and prevent the virus from mutating very
often. This makes the infection easier to control because the
body does not have to recognize and subdue new variations every
few months. If researchers could figure out how a survivor can
keep such tight control of the chessboard, then perhaps they
can find a way to give other patients the same ability.
Clinicians might even be able to boost the defenses of people
whose immune systems have already suffered serious damage.
</p>
<p> The healthy survivors may lead a genetically charmed life.
Each of the body's cells possesses an identical inherited
molecular trait, dubbed its HLA type, that allows an individual
to distinguish friend from microscopic foe. Some people's HLA
types are more common than others. Heredity specialists have
already identified a few genetic types that appear to increase
a person's chance of developing AIDS after infection. Now they
are trying to determine if long-term survivors hold any
inherited molecular configurations in common that could be
responsible for their ability to resist HIV.
</p>
<p> One of the most surprising findings has been the discovery
of a subset of healthy, long-term survivors who have lived for
years with CD4 counts less than 200. For the most part, they do
not develop the secondary infections that are associated with
AIDS, or if they do, they tend to recover. This only goes to
prove that there is a lot about the immune system that
immunologists still do not understand. Some researchers believe
these men managed to press other white blood cells into service
to make up for the CD4 deficiency.
</p>
<p> Because gay men were the first people to be studied, most
of the current data comes from them. In the past 18 months,
however, researchers have launched a growing number of studies
of women and children infected with HIV, and the preliminary
results are encouraging. Once investigators start looking for
healthy survivors, they find them. Still the question remains--Why? Does the amount of virus a woman is exposed to make a
difference? How effective might her vaginal and cervical tissue
be as a barrier against infection? Does it matter if a child is
infected while still in the womb or during passage through the
birth canal?
</p>
<p> The answers to these and other questions are just
beginning to take shape. By painstakingly studying the same
individuals over long periods of time, scientists are changing
the way they think about AIDS. Clearly, some people can fight
off the virus on their own. Over the past five years, doctors
have developed more and more treatments to control the
opportunistic infections and illnesses that appear in other
patients. Scientists may not discover a cure, but if they learn
how to control an HIV infection the way diabetes can be managed
with insulin, they will have tamed one of the most feared
killers of the 20th century.
</p>
</body>
</article>
</text>