Close X
Wednesday, November 27, 2024
ADVT 
Health

New UBC Study Finds HIV Treatment Could Contribute To Syphilis Outbreak

The Canadian Press, 17 Jan, 2017 10:33 AM
    VANCOUVER — Researchers at the University of British Columbia say a drug treatment that is key to the successful fight against HIV infection could leave patients prone to other diseases, such as syphilis.
     
    The study says drugs used to treat HIV could affect how the body responds to syphilis, inadvertently contributing to an outbreak reported in several countries, primarily affecting men having sex with men.
     
    Past research has speculated new, highly effective HIV treatments had encouraged more high-risk sexual behaviour.
     
    But a release from the university says Michael Rekart, clinical professor in UBC's school of population and public health, noted huge gaps between cases of syphilis and other sexually transmitted infections such as gonorrhea.
     
    The UBC team noticed that even though new syphilis cases are commonly observed in patients receiving the most effective HIV medication known as highly active antiretroviral therapy, or HAART, mathematical models ruled out risky sexual behaviour as a contributing factor in outbreaks.
     
    Team member and University of Victoria microbiologist Caroline Cameron say the research suggests biological explanations for the effects of specific HIV drugs on the body's immune response to certain diseases.
     
    The findings should be examined more closely, Rekart says, adding that it's vital for HIV patients to continue to take the most effective medications.
     
    "HAART drugs are life-saving; syphilis is curable," he says. "HAART drugs bring people with HIV back to a normal state of immunity, they can have a normal life, they don't get most opportunistic infections such as tuberculosis."
     
    Researchers say the next step is to carefully look at HIV drugs and determine if any within the highly active antiretroviral therapy could impair immunity. 
     
    The research was published Monday in the international journal, Sexually Transmitted Infections.

    MORE Health ARTICLES

    Red Meat Intake May Advance Onset Of Girls' Periods

    Red Meat Intake May Advance Onset Of Girls' Periods
    Girls who eat red meat often start their periods on average five months earlier than those who do not, the findings showed.

    Red Meat Intake May Advance Onset Of Girls' Periods

    Pistachios Also Sold In Canada Blamed For At Least 11 Illnesses In US

    At least 11 people in nine U.S. states have been infected in a salmonella outbreak linked to pistachios and two of them have been hospitalized.

    Pistachios Also Sold In Canada Blamed For At Least 11 Illnesses In US

    Tampon Tax: Does Being Female In The US Carry Unfair Costs?

    Tampon Tax: Does Being Female In The US Carry Unfair Costs?
    Margo Seibert and Natalie Brasington don't think women should have to pay a "period tax," and like a growing number of other women, they are publicly questioning whether being female in the U.S. carries unfair costs.

    Tampon Tax: Does Being Female In The US Carry Unfair Costs?

    To Fluoridate Or Not To Fluoridate? Municipalities Drinking Up Water Debate

    To Fluoridate Or Not To Fluoridate? Municipalities Drinking Up Water Debate
    Dentist Larry Levin has made his pitch about the importance of adding fluoride to drinking water several times in recent years to city councils voting on the controversial issue.

    To Fluoridate Or Not To Fluoridate? Municipalities Drinking Up Water Debate

    New Ways Of Fighting Zika Needed After Dengue Problems

    New Ways Of Fighting Zika Needed After Dengue Problems
    Everything that was done in the country to control (mosquitoes) apparently didn't work," said Jorge Kalil, director of the Butantan Institute in Sao Paolo, Brazil, who attended the meeting

    New Ways Of Fighting Zika Needed After Dengue Problems

    Did You Know Your Height And Weight May Affect Income?

    Men who are shorter in height and women who are obese are more likely to be socio-economically deprived with lower levels of education, occupation, and income, suggests new research.

    Did You Know Your Height And Weight May Affect Income?