lunes, 27 de junio de 2011

HIV Drugs May Be Tied to Early Aging: MedlinePlus

HIV Drugs May Be Tied to Early Aging: MedlinePlus: "HIV Drugs May Be Tied to Early Aging
Older class of antiretroviral meds appears to damage DNA, study finds


URL of this page: http://www.nlm.nih.gov/medlineplus/news/fullstory_113666.html (*this news item will not be available after 09/24/2011)

By Robert Preidt
Sunday, June 26, 2011 HealthDay Logo
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* HIV/AIDS Medicines

SUNDAY, June 26 (HealthDay News) -- An older class of antiretroviral drugs used to treat HIV can cause premature aging, a new study suggests.

Researchers examined muscle cells from HIV patients and found that zidovudine (AZT) and other antiviral drugs known as nucleoside analogue reverse-transcriptase inhibitors (NRTIs) damage DNA in mitochondria, the energy factories in cells.

The study is published June 26 in the journal Nature Genetics.

The finding may help explain why some HIV patients treated with antiviral drugs show advanced signs of frailty and age-related diseases such as dementia and cardiovascular disease at an early age.

'HIV clinics were seeing patients who had otherwise been successfully treated but who showed signs of being much older than their years. This was a real mystery,' Professor Patrick Chinnery, a senior fellow in clinical science at the Institute of Genetic Medicine at Newcastle University in England, said in a Wellcome Trust news release.

'The DNA in our mitochondria gets copied throughout our lifetimes and, as we age, naturally accumulates errors,' he explained.

'We believe that these HIV drugs accelerate the rate at which these errors build up. So over the space of, say, 10 years, a person's mitochondrial DNA may have accumulated the same amount of errors as a person who has naturally aged 20 or 30 years. What is surprising, though, is that patients who came off the medication many years ago may still be vulnerable to these changes.'

Because they're relatively cheap, NRTIs are important for people in Africa and low-income countries, said study co-author and HIV specialist Dr. Brendan Payne of the Royal Victoria Infirmary in Newcastle.

'These drugs may not be perfect, but we must remember that when they were introduced they gave people an extra ten or twenty years when they would otherwise have died,' Payne said in the news release. 'In Africa, where the HIV epidemic has hit hardest and where more expensive medications are not an option, they are an absolute necessity.'

SOURCE: Wellcome Trust, news release, June 26, 2011
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