Second Baby ‘Cured’ of HIV Suffers Relapse

The child’s HIV levels had been undetectable since he was 6 months old, thanks to aggressive drug therapy that doctors started within 12 hours of his birth, doctors said.
This is the second time that a child believed “cured” of HIV with early treatment has suffered a relapse once they stopped taking antiretroviral medication.
In July, a 4-year-old Mississippi girl relapsed after living HIV-free for more than two years without medication.
“What we’ve learned here is if you have an HIV-infected child who started treatment early, the fact that you have negative tests does not signify that the child has been cured or that they can be taken off treatment,” said Dr. Deborah Persaud. She is a professor of infectious diseases at the John Hopkins Children’s Center in Baltimore and one of the two pediatric HIV experts involved in the ongoing analysis of the Mississippi case.
The Italian boy, known as the “Milan baby,” was born to an HIV-positive mother in December 2009.
He was born with a heavy HIV viral load, and doctors immediately put him on antiretroviral therapy. His HIV levels immediately began to drop, and were undetectable at 6 months of age.
Tests at age 3 to measure the amount of HIV in the child’s blood suggested that the virus had been eradicated, and even antibodies to HIV had disappeared. With the agreement of the child’s mother, doctors took him off his medication regimen.

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