A Norwegian man has been effectively cured of HIV after receiving a stem cell transplant from his brother, doctors announced on Monday.
The patient’s brother happened to carry a rare, virus-blocking genetic mutation.
The man (63), dubbed the ‘Oslo patient’, is the latest in around 10 people worldwide who have gone into long-term remission from HIV after receiving a transplant to treat unrelated blood cancer.
The high-risk procedure normally requires a donor to have a specific mutation of their CCR5 gene, which blocks HIV from entering the body’s cells.
Only around 1% of people in northern Europe have the necessary mutation.
The Oslo patient, who had been living with HIV since 2006, was diagnosed with a fatal blood cancer called myelodysplastic syndrome in 2017.
His doctors searched for a donor who would help treat both. When they couldn’t find one, they chose the man’s elder brother.
However, on the day of the transplant in 2020, the doctors were stunned to discover that the brother carried the CCR5 mutation.
“We had no idea . . . That was amazing,” doctor Anders Myhre of the Oslo University Hospital has told AFP.
The patient says “it was like winning the lottery twice”, adds Myhre, who was also the lead author of a study describing the case in Nature Microbiology.
Two years after the transplant, the patient stopped taking the antiretroviral drugs which had been reducing the level of HIV in his body.
The researchers found no trace of the virus in samples of the man’s blood, gut or bone marrow.
“For all practical purposes, we are quite certain that he is cured,” Myhre says.
Now the Oslo patient, whose name was not revealed, is “having a great time” and has more energy than he knows what to do with, Myhre says.
The painful and potentially dangerous transplant procedure is for people who have both HIV and deadly blood cancer, so is not a feasible option for the millions of people living with the virus across the world.
However, researchers believe studying these rare cases would reveal more about how HIV works in the hope of finding a cure for all patients.
The Oslo patient is the first person to receive a transplant from a family member.
The patient’s immune system had been “completely replaced” by the donor’s, study co-author Marius Troseid of the University of Oslo says.
It was the first time this had been observed in a cured patient’s bone marrow and gut, he has told AFP.
Even before the researchers found out the brother had a CCR5 mutation, they had some hope that the Oslo patient’s HIV could be cured.
That is because in 2024 it was revealed that the so-called ‘next Berlin patient’ entered long-term remission despite receiving a transplant that did not have two copies of the mutated gene.
The original Berlin patient, Timothy Ray Brown, was the first person declared cured of HIV in 2008.
Patients in London, New York, Geneva, Duesseldorf and elsewhere followed.
Given the Oslo patient’s robust health, Troseid has suggested his nickname was no longer suitable.
“The Oslo patient is perhaps no longer a patient. At least he doesn’t feel like it,” Troseid says.
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