Close X
Tuesday, November 26, 2024
ADVT 
Health

University Of Alberta Professor Announces Breakthrough On Liver Disease

The Canadian Press, 20 Feb, 2015 02:54 PM
    EDMONTON — A professor of medicine at the University of Alberta says he has discovered proof of a connection between human betaretrovirus infection (HBRV) and an autoimmune liver disease called primary biliary cirrhosis.
     
    Andrew Mason has published his findings in the February edition of the journal Alimentary Pharmacology and Therapeutics.
     
    Mason says he held fast to his theory for the last decade, even though much of the world's scientific community had long dismissed it.
     
    Primary biliary cirrhosis is a rare disease that affects the bile duct in the liver.
     
    It occurs in one in 500 middle-aged women and is found in about 10 per cent of all patients needing liver transplants.
     
    Despite the progress being made, Mason says HBRV has still not yet been fully linked as the cause of disease.
     
    “Our publication shows that this virus inserts its DNA into the human genome, where we found the junction regions of virus integration in cells of the biliary epithelium, the site of disease,” explains Mason, whose colleague in the research was Prof. Gane Wong of the University of Alberta.
     
    “This is the gold standard for demonstrating retrovirus infection. We actually saw over 1,500 unique virus integrations in patients’ samples. So that settles an ongoing debate since the 1970s saying that a betaretrovirus like ours is not a human pathogen.”
     
    Mason says the discussion reached a stalemate in the 1980s and was eventually ignored once the HIV epidemic emerged.
     
    In 1998 the University of Alberta researcher began examining HBRV and its connection to primary biliary cirrhosis, eventually publishing findings linking the two in the journal Proceedings of the National Academy of Science.
     
    The findings, though, were called into question after another group was unable to find the virus within the liver of PBC patients and challenged the study.
     
    Now more than a decade later, Mason says his team is able to offer further and more detailed proof through the advancement of technology and the use of gene sequencing.
     
    “We always thought that autoimmune diseases like PBC looked like virus infections underneath the microscope but people have been unable to find viruses. Because they found autoantibodies they assumed they were autoimmune diseases. But patients with hepatitis C virus make autoantibodies and no one calls this an autoimmune disease. So we are taking the same approach with PBC as with hepatitis C virus infection. Try and knock out the virus with antiviral therapy.”
     
    His team is in the midst of a randomized controlled trial that he hopes will provide further proof. They are following PBC patients who are taking antiretroviral therapy to see if they show clinical improvement.
     
    “Loss of virus equals loss of disease. We have to show that.”
     
    Mason believes the findings offer new avenues of research for future clinical treatment. While answers won’t come quickly, he says they are emerging, offering hope to patients suffering from PBC.
     
    “We’ve seen some improvement in patients with recurrent PBC following liver transplantation using antiviral therapy."
     
    Research funding was provided by Canadian Institutes of Health Research, Alberta Heritage Foundation for Medical Research, Alberta Cancer Foundation, Canadian Liver Foundation, Alberta Health Services and the Li Ka Shing Institute of Virology.

    MORE Health ARTICLES

    Myths About Noon Nap Busted

    Myths About Noon Nap Busted
    It is often believed that an afternoon nap can do a body good. But there are people who are not convinced with the power of the afternoon snooze.

    Myths About Noon Nap Busted

    Regulation of brain molecule could help marijuana addicts

    Regulation of brain molecule could help marijuana addicts
    A natural molecule that activates cannabinoid receptors in the brain could relieve mood and anxiety disorders and enable some people to quit....

    Regulation of brain molecule could help marijuana addicts

    Even mild heart disease increases mortality risk for diabetic patients

    Even mild heart disease increases mortality risk for diabetic patients
    A large-scale study involving 40,000 patients from 17 centres around the world has found that diabetic patients with even mild coronary artery disease face...

    Even mild heart disease increases mortality risk for diabetic patients

    'Ebola vaccine showing promising results'

    'Ebola vaccine showing promising results'
    Two Ebola vaccines undergoing clinical trials have shown promising results and would be deployed in January 2015 to West African countries affected by the...

    'Ebola vaccine showing promising results'

    US Institute To Study Sexual Habits Of Obese Girls

    US Institute To Study Sexual Habits Of Obese Girls
    The US National Institute for Health (NIH) has collaborated with researchers from the University of Pittsburgh' Magee-Women's Research Institute to study the sexual habits of obese girls.

    US Institute To Study Sexual Habits Of Obese Girls

    Toy-related Injuries On The Rise In US

    Toy-related Injuries On The Rise In US
    The study highlights that while playing with toys helps children to develop, learn, and explore, parents should also note that many toys pose an injury risk to children.

    Toy-related Injuries On The Rise In US