FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Contact: Myrna Manners, Kathleen Robinson, Peggy Sung
Phone: (212) 821-0560
E-mail: krobinso@mail.med.cornell.edu
WEILL CORNELL RESEARCHERS DEVELOP NEW TREATMENT REGIMEN FOR HIV-POSITIVE
PATIENTS
Studies of Low-Dose Interleukin II Currently Underway
New York, NY (March 19, 1999)--A promising new treatment protocol of
Interleukin II (IL-2) is currently under development as an immune stimulant
for HIV-positive individuals who have responded to medication
but have not achieved recovery of their immune system. Pioneered
by researchers at Weill Medical College of Cornell University, this low-dose,
non-toxic regimen is now being investigated in clinical trials.
IL-2 -- originally described and characterized by Dr. Kendall Smith,
Chief of Immunology in the Department of Medicine has been used as
an immune stimulant for cancer patients for more than 10 years.
More recently, others have treated HIV- positive individuals with
high doses of IL-2, but this led to severe side effects. Consequently,
IL-2 could only be given for a few days every two months.
“This new regimen is different in that it entails daily
low-dose administration of IL-2 ,” said Dr. Smith, “and since it appears
to be entirely non-toxic, patients can receive treatment without interruption
to their daily lives.”
Although new anti-viral drugs are effective in inhibiting HIV,
they have not been proven effective in reconstituting the patient’s damaged
immune system. One of the manifestations of immune system damage
is a deficiency of IL-2 production by “Helper” T cells.
The purpose of IL-2 therapy is to promote the return of normal numbers
of “Helper” T cells and boost the number of Cytotoxic T cells, which,
in turn, can destroy HIV-infected cells. As the number
of “Helper T” cells returns to normal, the immune system is better equipped
to respond to HIV as well as other infectious microbes.
Along with Dr. Smith, the Weill Cornell research team includes
Dr. Elizabeth Jacobson, Assistant Professor of Medicine, and Dr. Roger
Emert, Assistant Professor of Medicine, from the Immunology Division;
Dr. David Warren, Assistant Professor of Medicine from the Center for Special
Studies; and Dr. Michael Giordano, Assistant Professor of Medicine in the
Division of International Medicine and Infectious Diseases. Together
they developed this new IL-2 treatment in clinical trials and pharmacological
studies based on Dr. Smith’s discovery of IL-2 receptors over 20 years
ago.
Several clinical trials are ongoing at Weill Cornell and are still open
for patient enrollment. For further information, call (212) 746-4464
or e-mail at fspodek@mail.med.cornell.edu.
© 1999 New York Presbyterian
Hospital
Weill Medical College of Cornell
University
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