
-
Trump lashes out as suspended TV host Kimmel returns to air
-
Yankees clinch MLB playoff berth with walk-off win over White Sox
-
Australia lose fullback Kellaway ahead of Bledisloe Cup
-
Race for rare minerals brings boom to Tajikistan's mines
-
France to host DR Congo emergency conference as Kinshasa calls for aid
-
Iran's carpet industry unravelling under sanctions
-
No pause for food delivery riders during Pakistan's monsoon
-
Asia markets waver after Wall St retreats from record
-
Brilliant Marquez poised to seal seventh MotoGP title in Japan
-
14 killed, 124 missing in Taiwan after barrier lake burst
-
14 killed by lake burst in Taiwan as Typhoon Ragasa wreaks havoc
-
In just one year, Google turns AI setbacks into dominance
-
New York's finance sector faces risks from Trump visa crackdown
-
Toxic homes a lasting legacy of Los Angeles fires
-
China steps into spotlight at UN climate talks
-
Guineans approve new constitution by wide margin, pave way for elections
-
WhatsApp, Twitch among sites that could face Australia under-16s social media ban
-
'Guess what!': Macron phones Trump after blocked by presidential convoy
-
Journal retracts study linking apple cider vinegar to weight loss
-
Chile puts forward ex-president Bachelet for UN top job
-
'We're gonna help': Trump to the rescue of struggling Argentina
-
France's Macron warns against 'survival of the fittest' in world affairs
-
US hails 'gladiator' DeChambeau as Ryder Cup controversy swirls
-
YouTube to reinstate creators banned over misinformation
-
Sixties screen siren Claudia Cardinale dies aged 87
-
Kane 'welcome' to make Spurs return: Frank
-
Trump says Ukraine can win back all territory, in sudden shift
-
Real Madrid thrash Levante as Mbappe hits brace
-
Isak scores first Liverpool goal in League Cup win, Chelsea survive scare
-
US stocks retreat from records as tech giants fall
-
Escalatorgate: White House urges probe into Trump UN malfunctions
-
Zelensky says China could force Russia to stop Ukraine war
-
Claudia Cardinale: single mother who survived rape to be a screen queen
-
With smiles and daggers at UN, Lula and Trump agree to meet
-
Iran meets Europeans but no breakthrough as Tehran pushes back
-
Trump says Kyiv can win back 'all of Ukraine' in major shift
-
US veterans confident in four Ryder Cup rookies
-
Ecuador's president claims narco gang behind fuel price protests
-
Qatar's ruler says to keep efforts to broker Gaza truce despite strike
-
Pakistan stay alive in Asia Cup with win over Sri Lanka
-
S.Korea leader at UN vows to end 'vicious cycle' with North
-
Four years in prison for woman who plotted to sell Elvis's Graceland
-
'Greatest con job ever': Trump trashes climate science at UN
-
Schools shut, flights axed as Typhoon Ragasa nears Hong Kong, south China
-
Celtics star Tatum doesn't rule out playing this NBA season
-
Trump says NATO nations should shoot down Russian jets breaching airspace
-
Trump says at Milei talks that Argentina does not 'need' bailout
-
Iran meets Europeans but no sign of sanctions breakthrough
-
NBA icon Jordan's insights help Europe's Donald at Ryder Cup
-
Powell warns of inflation risks if US Fed cuts rates 'too aggressively'
RYCEF | 0.64% | 15.74 | $ | |
RBGPF | -1.74% | 75.29 | $ | |
NGG | 0.56% | 71.36 | $ | |
AZN | -2.01% | 75.97 | $ | |
SCS | -0.18% | 16.87 | $ | |
BP | 1.07% | 34.74 | $ | |
BTI | -1.28% | 53.19 | $ | |
RIO | -0.13% | 63.57 | $ | |
GSK | -0.96% | 40.52 | $ | |
CMSC | -0.41% | 24.15 | $ | |
CMSD | -0.58% | 24.32 | $ | |
VOD | -0.26% | 11.36 | $ | |
JRI | 0.28% | 14.04 | $ | |
RELX | -1.31% | 46.47 | $ | |
BCE | 0.73% | 23.24 | $ | |
BCC | -0.6% | 78.97 | $ |

Fourth person 'cured' of HIV, but is a less risky cure in sight?
AIDS researchers announced on Wednesday that a fourth person has been "cured" of HIV, but the dangerous procedure for patients also battling cancer may be little comfort for the tens of millions living with the virus worldwide.
The 66-year-old man, named the "City of Hope" patient after the Californian centre where he was treated, was declared in remission in the lead up to the International AIDS Conference, which begins in Montreal, Canada on Friday.
He is the second person to be announced cured this year, after researchers said in February that a US woman dubbed the New York patient had also gone into remission.
The City of Hope patient, like the Berlin and London patients before him, achieved lasting remission from the virus after a bone marrow transplant to treat cancer.
Another man, the Duesseldorf patient, has also previously been said to have reached remission, potentially bringing the number cured to five.
Jana Dickter, an infectious disease specialist at the City of Hope, told AFP that because the latest patient was the oldest yet to achieve remission, his success could be promising for older HIV sufferers who also have cancer.
Dickter is the lead author of research on the patient which was announced at a pre-conference in Montreal but has not been peer reviewed.
- 'I am beyond grateful' -
"When I was diagnosed with HIV in 1988, like many others, I thought it was a death sentence," said the patient, who does not want to be identified.
"I never thought I would live to see the day that I no longer have HIV," he said in a City of Hope statement. "I am beyond grateful."
Dickter said the patient had told her of the stigma he experienced during the early days of the AIDS epidemic in the 1980s.
"He saw many of his friends and loved ones become very ill and ultimately succumb to the disease," she said.
He had "full-blown AIDS" for a time, she said, but was part of early trials of antiretroviral therapy, which now allows many of the 38 million with HIV globally to live with the virus.
He had HIV for 31 years, longer than any previous patient who went into remission.
After being diagnosed with leukaemia, in 2019 he received a bone marrow transplant with stem cells from an unrelated donor with a rare mutation in which part of the CCR5 gene is missing, making people resistant to HIV.
He waited until getting vaccinated for Covid-19 in March 2021 to stop taking antiretrovirals, and has been in remission from both HIV and cancer since.
Reduced-intensity chemotherapy worked for the patient, potentially allowing older HIV patients with cancer to get the treatment, Dickter said.
But it is a complex procedure with serious side effects and "isn't a suitable option for most people with HIV", she added.
Steven Deeks, an HIV expert at the University of California, San Francisco who was not involved in the research, said the "first thing you do in a bone marrow transplant is you destroy your own immune system temporarily".
"You would never do this if you didn't have cancer," he told AFP.
- 'Holy Grail' -
Also announced at the AIDS conference was research about a 59-year-old Spanish woman with HIV who has maintained an undetectable viral load for 15 years despite stopping antiretroviral therapy.
Sharon Lewin, president-elect of the International AIDS Society which convenes the conference, said that it was not quite the same as the City of Hope patient, because the virus remained at a very low level.
"A cure remains the Holy Grail of HIV research," Lewin said.
"We have seen a handful of individual cure cases before and the two presented today provide continued hope for people living with HIV and inspiration for the scientific community."
She also pointed to a "truly exciting development" towards identifying HIV in an individual cell, which is "a bit like finding a needle in a haystack".
Deeks, an author of the new research also presented at the conference, said it was an "unprecedented deep dive into the biology of the infected cell".
The researchers identified that a cell with HIV has several particular characteristics.
It can proliferate better than most, is hard to kill, and is both resilient and hard to detect, Deeks said.
"This is why HIV is a lifelong infection."
But he said that cases such as the City of Hope patient offered a potential roadmap towards a more broadly available cure, possibly using CRISPR gene-editing technology.
"I think that if you can get rid of HIV, and get rid of CCR5, the door by which HIV gets in, then you can cure someone," Deeks said.
"It's theoretically possible -- we're not there yet -- to give someone a shot in the arm that will deliver an enzyme that will go into the cells and knock out CCR5, and knock out the virus.
"But that's science fiction for now."
N.Awad--SF-PST