Australian study uncovers first potential prophylactic treatment against HTLV-1
AUSTRALIA, JUL 22 – Two HIV antiviral drugs suppressed HTLV-1 transmission in mice, offering the first potential preventative treatment for a virus affecting 10 million people globally, including many First Nations communities.
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6 Articles
A deadly virus no one talks about — and the HIV drugs that might stop it
HIV antivirals may be the key to stopping HTLV-1, a deadly virus with no cure. In a decade-long study, researchers successfully suppressed the virus in mice and discovered a way to kill infected cells, offering hope for the first preventative and curative treatments.
Australian study finds potential treatment for virus impacting millions
A landmark Australian study may have found a treatment and cure for a virus that impacts 10 million people worldwide.Human T-Cell leukaemia type 1 (HTLV-1) is a life-threatening virus that impacts the immune system and the blood cells involved in fighting off infection within the body.Research on HTLV-1 has been sparse, but a study conducted by the Walter and Eliza Hall Institute of Medical Research (WEHI) and the Doherty Institute in Melbourne …
Study identifies world-first treatments to prevent a life-threatening virus infection - Scientific Inquirer
Around 10 million people globally live with the life-threatening virus HTLV-1. Yet it remains a poorly understood disease that currently has no preventative treatments and no cure. But a landmark study co-led by Australian researchers could change this, after finding existing HIV drugs can suppress transmission of the HTLV-1 virus in mice. The study, published in Cell, could lead to the first treatments to prevent the spread of this virus that i…
First treatments to prevent life-threatening virus infection identifie
Around 10 million people globally live with the life-threatening virus HTLV-1. Yet it remains a poorly understood disease that currently has no preventative treatments and no cure. But a landmark study co-led by WEHI and the Peter Doherty Institute for Infection and Immunity (Doherty Institute) could change this, after finding existing HIV drugs can suppress transmission of the HTLV-1 virus in mice.
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