PROJECT INFORM IN OTHER MEDIA ... 2008
AIDS drug doubles heart attack risk
by John Miller, eNews
2.0
April 2, 2008
(mention of Project Inform in bold below)
A major study conducted in the United States, Europe and Australia
has found that a popular AIDS drug roughly doubles the risk for
heart attacks. The substance, abacavir, is one of three types
of drugs used in combination to prevent the deadly HIV virus
from replicating.
"This is a head-scratcher, in the sense that we don't really
understand the biology here," said Paul Dalton, director of Treatment
and Advocacy for Project Inform in San Francisco, as quoted by
SF Chronicle.
Also, another AIDS drug was found to raise the risk
of heart attack by 50 percent. The study was led by Jens D. Lundgren
of the University of Copenhagen and analyzed data from more than
33,000 people infected with the AIDS virus who were followed
for up to five years to see who had heart problems.
Those who
took Ziagen, which is the brand name for abacavir, saw their
risk increase double fold while those who took Videx,
the brand name for didanosine, had their heart risk increased
by half. Other anti-HIV drugs such as zidovudine (AZT), stavudine
(Zerit) or lamivudine (Epivir) did not exhibit these side effects.
Top
AIDS experts said in late March that a HIV vaccine will not be
soon available and much more basic research is needed before
attempting again to develop one. This conclusion was mainly the
result of the total failure of trials for current vaccine prototypes,
some of which have actually raised the risk of contracting HIV.
What
the acknowledgement means is that no real progress was made in
the past 25 years towards an effective AIDS vaccine. The announcement
was made at a scientific meeting which took place at the National
Institutes of Health in Bethesda. Dr. Anthony S. Fauci, the director
of the National Institute of Allergy and
Infectious Diseases, warned that there is no immediate solution
for fighting against the deadly HIV.