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NEW HERPES, AIDS CANCER LINK
By Sean Henahan, Access Excellence
NEW YORK-
The discovery of a possible new herpes virus may
help explain why some AIDS patients develop a rare form of cancer
called Kaposi's sarcoma.
Kaposi's sarcoma (KS) is a rare form of cancer that causes
purple blotchy marks on the skin. and can eventually spread
to lymph glands and the digestive tract. Before the 1980's it
was rarely seen except in older patients of Mediterranean
extraction with impaired immune systems. Then with the advent of
the AIDS epidemic, physicians suddenly began to see hundreds of
cases of Kaposi's sarcoma. Moreover, the form now seen in up to
a third of AIDS patients is more aggressive than the previous
form.
Clinicians soon observed that the cancer was much more
prevalent in homosexual male AIDS patients, up to 20 times more
frequent than in heterosexual patients with AIDS. This led to
the hypothesis that a sexually transmitted infectious organism
could be associated with KS transmission. A number of potential
causes were proposed including cytomegalovirus, hepatitis B virus
and HIV itself. Nitrite inhalers, poppers, were also considered.
None of these were proven to cause KS.
A team of researchers at Columbia University obtained KS
specimens from 27 patients who had died of AIDS. Using a new
technique for purifying selected DNA sequences from within the
genome called "representational difference analysis", the
researchers found that 25 of the 27 specimens had DNA sequences
associated with herpes viruses. The new method makes simplified
"representations" of genomes from diseased and normal tissue,
using PCR to amplify short DNA sequences. A representation from
diseased tissue is attached to a priming sequence and hybridized
to a normal tissue representation. Subsequent rounds of PCR
reveal unique DNA sequences in the diseased tissue.
Using this technique, the researchers also evaluated other
tissues. They found the herpes DNA sequences in only six of 39
non-KS tissues from AIDS patients, and in none of the tissues of
people who did not have AIDS or KS. Two of six positive
specimens from AIDS patients were from patients with KS in other
sites. Another three positive specimens were from patients who
may have been in early stages of KS.
The researchers identified DNA sequences containing fragments
of genes common to several herpes viruses in the Kaposi's sarcoma
tissues. The sequences are homologous to those seen in other
herpes viruses, saimiri and Epstein Barr virus. However, the
sequences were different enough to suggest a new human herpes
virus may have been discovered.
The current research remains preliminary. The existence of
the new herpes virus remains to be confirmed and visualized.
Moreover, more research will be needed to determine if the virus
does indeed cause or promote KS, or if it is merely a passenger
in the KS lesions. Researchers will also want to look at KS in
non AIDS patients for signs of the virus.
If indeed future research confirms a causal link between a
new herpes virus and KS, it might be possible to develop improved
diagnostic and treatment approaches for this form of cancer which
is currently difficult to treat and impossible to cure..
Recent research has shown that viruses can cause cancers,
notably, papilloma virus and cervical cancer; Epstein-Barr virus
and lymphoma; and HTLV, a relative of HIV, and a form of
leukemia.
For more information see: Chang et al., Science, v.266,
12/16/94, pp. 1865-1869.
Transmitted: 94-12-29 14:58:31 EST
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