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Monday, December 10, 2012

Breakthrough in leukemia treatment uses HIV

Raw Story:

A reprogrammed version of the virus that causes AIDS was used by doctors at the Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia to wipe out a little girl’s terminal leukemia.

According to The New York Times, 6-year-old Emma Whitehead didn’t have much longer to live when the radical and untested therapy was pitched to her parents. But after two relapses, they’d exhausted all other options.

So, using modified HIV that disables transmission of the virus, doctors loaded in up with custom T-cells that reprogrammed her immune system to fight off her leukemia.

Though it worked, Whitehead wasn’t out of the woods after the treatment, which caused her to become horribly ill, swollen and running a fever of 105 degrees, according to the Times.

After doctors administered an arthritis drug on a long-shot hope, she managed to recover. Her fever and inflammation fell and the Times says that Whitehead started to recover.

“Today, Whitehead is much more healthy and happy thanks to the therapy,” the report goes on. “Doctor’s haven’t said she’s cured just yet, but things are looking up — for Whitehead and the rest of the world.”

That ought to throw a wrench into the arguments of nutjobs who claim HIV/AIDS is “God’s punishment” for being gay.

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