You have commented 339 times on Rantburg.

Your Name
Your e-mail (optional)
Website (optional)
My Original Nic        Pic-a-Nic        Sorry. Comments have been closed on this article.
Bold Italic Underline Strike Bullet Blockquote Small Big Link Squish Foto Photo
Europe
Patient beats HIV in world first
2005-11-13
A BRITISH man is believed to have become the first person in the world to beat HIV.

Andrew Stimpson, 25, was diagnosed as HIV positive in August, 2002. However, tests 14 months later showed the virus had completely gone from his body, despite taking no medication to combat it.
His doctors are adamant there were no mix-ups with his tests and the sandwich maker will now offer his body for medical research to help doctors in their quest to find a cure for HIV, which causes AIDS.

"I remember after the repeat tests my doctor came into the room saying, 'You've cured yourself. This is unbelievable. You're fantastic'," he told the News of the World.

"It's so amazing to think that one day I was staring death in the face and now I am waving it goodbye."

Mr Stimpson was all the more surprised given that on hearing he had tested positive, he gave up safe sex with his HIV-positive boyfriend, 44-year-old Juan Gomez.

On hearing of the negative tests, he considered suing his hospital over what he thought must have been bungled earlier tests.
"There had been no error in labelling or testing of the samples," the hospital wrote to him.

"The fact that you have recovered from a positive antibody result to a negative result is exceptional and medically remarkable. I understand the (hospital authority) trust have written to you highlighting your importance to other HIV patients."

Mr Stimpson said: "I will do anything I can if it will help find a cure for HIV."

Australian Federation of Aids Organisations president Ian Rankin said insights gained from Mr Stimpson's case could help millions of HIV sufferers.

Mr Stimpson's case was extremely rare, the only confirmed case when over 40 million people worldwide were infected with HIV, he said.

"We need to be careful that rare events like this don't affect everyone's understanding of how seriously HIV infection affects people," he said.

Mr Stimpson, from the Scottish coast west of Glasgow, went for tests in May 2002 after feeling weak and feverish. They came back negative. However, tests in August that year found an exceptionally low level of HIV antibodies.

Chelsea and Westminster Healthcare NHS Trust, who carried out the initial tests, said Mr Stimpson has so far declined to undergo further tests with them.

A spokeswoman confirmed Mr Stimpson had had a positive and a negative test for the virus, but stopped short of saying he had been cured.
Posted by:Oztralian

#4  Besoeker, what don't you understand? He was tested positive, and stopped using a rubber with a guy who also tested positive. Two people who are already infected may as well not worry about infecting each other.
Posted by: Robert Crawford   2005-11-13 21:09  

#3  Mr Stimpson was all the more surprised given that on hearing he had tested positive, he gave up safe sex with his HIV-positive boyfriend, 44-year-old Juan Gomez.

Bright lads they are. Was that 'T' in Stimpson a misprint?
Posted by: Besoeker   2005-11-13 19:04  

#2  Next week, he'll probably be run over by a bus, a double-decker full of Saudi wifeys shopping or imams on tour.
Posted by: .com   2005-11-13 18:56  

#1  The usual natural process. While billions are flowing to unending and non-productive university studies and subsidies for drug companies, the medical community should have been spending its time to identify people who beat it or resist it. With the human gnome now known, the community should be able to isolate the factor that grants the immunity. Natural selection at work. Use it. Quit wasting time and money to support dead end welfare for the intellectually gifted.
Posted by: Angatch Omump4656   2005-11-13 18:51  

00:00