Subject: CDC NCHSTP Daily News Update
Date: Thu Jan 29 08:31:03 PST 1998 (215 lines)
From: National AIDS Info Clearinghouse
Copyright 1998, Information, Inc., Bethesda, MD


From: "Aidsnews" <aidsnews@smtpinet.aspensys.com>
Newsgroups: sci.med.aids
Approved: Yes: "S. Hall" <shall@compassnet.com>,Jack Hamilton <jfh@alumni.stanford.org>
Subject: CDC NCHSTP Daily News Update 01/29/98
Message-ID: <48921@sci.med.aids>
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Date: Thu, 29 Jan 1998 09:11:45 CDT
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                  CDC NCHSTP Daily News Update
                        January 29, 1998
 
The CDC National Center for HIV, STD and TB Prevention provides 
the following information as a public service only.  Providing 
synopses of key scientific articles and lay media reports on 
HIV/AIDS, other sexually transmitted diseases and tuberculosis 
does not constitute CDC endorsement.  This daily update also 
includes information from CDC and other government agencies, such 
as background on Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report (MMWR) 
articles, fact sheets, press releases and announcements. 
Reproduction of this text is encouraged; however, copies may not 
be sold, and the CDC NCHSTP Daily News Update should be cited as 
the source of the information.  Copyright 1998, Information Inc., 
Bethesda, MD.
 
CORRECTION: The 01/28/98 edition of the CDC NCHSTP Daily News 
Update incorrectly stated the title of one of the abstracted 
articles. The Journal of the American Medical Association
abstract, "Evaluation of Case Management of Patients With HIV 
Infection in France (Letter)," should have been titled "Evolution
of Case Management of Patients With HIV Infection in France
(Letter)."
 
HEADLINES
---------
 
PEER-REVIEWED JOURNALS
"Fulminant Hepatitis Associated With Hepatitis A Virus 
Superinfection in Patients With Chronic Hepatitis C"
 
GENERAL MEDIA
"2 Newborns Are Counted in AIDS Case"
"AIDS Deaths in Britain Fell Sharply in 1997"
"Gene Approach May Work Against AIDS, Researchers Say" 
"Across the USA: Washington"
"Long Wait for Partners of Man With AIDS" 
"Rights--Venezuela: Big Victory for AIDS Victims"
"PCP Prophylaxis More Frequent at Clinics With Range of HIV 
Services"
 
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                    PEER-REVIEWED JOURNALS
***************************************************************
 
"Fulminant Hepatitis Associated With Hepatitis A Virus
Superinfection in Patients With Chronic Hepatitis C"
New England Journal of Medicine (01/29/98) Vol. 338, No. 5, P.
286; Vento, Sandro; Garofano, Tiziana; Renzini, Carlo; et al.
     Italian researchers have concluded that individuals with
chronic hepatitis C virus infection are at significant risk for 
fulminant hepatitis and death associated with hepatitis A 
superinfection.  From June 1990 to July 1997, the scientists 
examined 163 adults with chronic hepatitis B and 432 patients 
with chronic hepatitis C who were seronegative for HAV 
antibodies; tests were conducted every four months for serum IgM 
and IgG antibodies to HAV.  Over the course of the study, 10 
patients with HBV infections and 17 with HCV infections acquired 
HAV superinfection.  Of these patients, fulminant hepatic failure 
developed in seven of the HCV-infected individuals, six of whom 
died.  All but one of the HBV patients who developed HAV had 
uncomplicated courses.  Since HAV infection rarely has a 
fulminant course and is usually non-fatal, the scientists note 
that "the high mortality rate among our patients with chronic 
hepatitis C and HAV superinfection (35 percent) is thus 
surprising, as is the even higher percentage of such patients 
with fulminant hepatitis (41 percent)."  The authors suggest, 
therefore, that individuals with chronic HCV infection be 
vaccinated against the hepatitis A virus.
 
****************************************************************
                         GENERAL MEDIA
****************************************************************
 
"2 Newborns Are Counted in AIDS Case"
New York Times (01/29/98) P. A23; Perez-Pena, Richard
     Two HIV-positive women infected by Nushawn Williams in
Chautauqua County, New York, have given birth to HIV-positive 
babies, bringing the number of people infected by Williams up to 
16.  Williams is said to have infected 13 women and girls in the 
county, and one man contracted HIV from one of those women. 
Health officials note that at least 10 of Williams' partners in 
New York City have also tested HIV positive, but they say it may 
never be known whether he was the source of their infection.  The 
officials say they have concluded that Williams directly infected 
the 13 women in upstate New York because, out of all the sexual 
partners the women had at the time, Williams is the only one who 
has tested HIV positive.  Ten of those women were exposed to the 
virus after Williams learned he was infected in September 1996.  
Chautauqua District Attorney James Subjack plans to prosecute for 
assault in those instances, setting a legal precedence in New 
York.  New York legislators have cited the Williams case in 
calling for mandatory name reporting for HIV patients and 
suggesting legal measures that make it a felony for an 
HIV-infected individual to fail to warn a sexual partner.
 
"AIDS Deaths in Britain Fell Sharply in 1997" 
Reuters Health Information Services (01/28/98)
     According to the U.K. Communicable Disease Surveillance
Center, the number of AIDS deaths dropped by 44 percent in the 
United Kingdom in 1997.  AIDS deaths numbered 450 for 1997--the 
lowest in six years--down from 802 the previous year. AIDS cases 
also reached their lowest total in six years, measuring 1,386 
cases in 1997.  Health officials attribute the fall in incidence 
and mortality to treatments that prolong the development of AIDS 
from HIV infection.  The agency also reported that the number of 
HIV infections due to male homosexual contact has fallen steadily 
since 1991, although the rate of heterosexual HIV transmission
has increased over the same period.
 
"Gene Approach May Work Against AIDS, Researchers Say" 
Reuters (01/28/98)
     U.S. government researchers claim that antisense gene
therapy may prove successful in combating AIDS, noting that the 
technique can boost the immune systems of monkeys infected with 
SIV.  Researchers at the National Human Genome Research 
Institute; the National Heart, Lung and Blood Institute; and 
Johns Hopkins University created a mirror-image of the Tat and 
Rev RNA genes, which control the proteins HIV makes to help 
itself replicate inside CD4 cells.  They introduced antisense Tat 
and Reve genes into some monkey CD4 cells and then reintroduced 
the cells into three of six monkeys, all of whom were then 
infected with SIV.  In the journal Nature Medicine, the 
researchers report that the antisense genes started producing 
mirror-image RNA, which connected to the HIV's RNA and kept it 
from functioning properly.  While all six animals contracted SIV, 
the data suggest that the three who received the gene therapy 
appeared to have slower emergence of symptoms and lowered virus 
levels in the blood and lymph nodes.
 
"Across the USA: Washington"
USA Today (01/29/98) P. 12A
     In Washington state, Governor Locke's advisory council is 
suggesting the use of codes to replace names in reporting HIV 
infections.  The council noted that by using codes, data could be 
collected without endangering people's privacy.
 
"Long Wait for Partners of Man With AIDS" 
United Press International (01/28/98)
     A 33-year-old man just out of prison may have infected up to
10 women and girls in Michigan with HIV.  Health officials also 
note that 60 men, women, and teenagers who had sexual contact 
with James Jones or his partners have thus far tested 
HIV-negative.  Testing will continue for several more months, 
however, because infection does not always show up immediately. 
Jones--who was released from prison last summer after serving 
four years for a sex offense--has pleaded guilty to one count 
each of third-degree criminal sexual conduct, failing to inform a 
sex partner he is HIV-positive, and being a habitual sex 
offender.
 
"Rights--Venezuela: Big Victory for AIDS Victims" 
IPS Wire (01/28/98)
     The Supreme Court of Venezuela has ruled in favor of four 
HIV-infected military personnel, upholding the civil rights of 
AIDS patients in discrimination cases.  Upon learning that the 
four soldiers had tested positive for HIV, the army publicly 
exposed their condition, leaving them open to ridicule.  However, 
in his ruling, Judge Alfredo Ducharne wrote that the government 
is responsible for the guarantee of the human dignity--as well as 
the economic, social, psychological and health needs of AIDS 
patients.  One of the lawyers responsible for bringing the trial 
to court, Edgar Carrasco, noted that few precedents exist in 
developing countries in which legal responsibility for 
HIV-positive individuals lies upon the state. Carrasco is 
director-general of the non-governmental group Citizens Action 
against AIDS  The soldiers went on forced medical leave when 
their infections were detected, but they continue to receive pay, 
thereby upholding their right to work.  With a population of 22.8 
million residents, Venezuela has 7,024 reported AIDS patients, 
more than 4,000 of whom have died.
 
"PCP Prophylaxis More Frequent at Clinics With Range of HIV 
Services"
Reuters Health Information Services (01/28/98)
     A report in the January issue of the Journal of General
Internal Medicine suggests that patients attending clinics 
offering a larger range of HIV services are more likely to 
receive prophylaxis for Pneumocystis carinii pneumonia than those 
attending non-HIV focused clinics.  The study, conducted by Dr. 
Barbara Turner of Jefferson Medical College in Philadelphia and 
colleagues, examined more than 1,800 HIV-positive Medicaid 
patients treated at 125 New York clinics.  The results showed 
that patients attending clinics with three or more HIV-related 
services had a 36 percent lower risk of developing PCP than 
patients attending clinics offering one or no HIV services.  In 
conclusion, the researchers assert their support for efforts now 
underway in New York for the transfer of HIV-positive Medicaid 
patients to HIV-focused managed care settings.
 
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