A California man is on the cusp of being declared cured of HIV and blood cancer.

Paul Edmonds, 68, who made international headlines last year when he shared his story, still has no traces of either condition after five years.

In a new article by the medical team who treated him, doctors said he was officially cured of cancer and two years away from being declared cured of HIV – when he will have gone without HIV medication for five years.

But Mr Edmonds’ journey has been tumultuous. He was diagnosed with AIDS in 1988 at a time when the virus was often a death sentence.

Despite watching so many of his friends die of the infection, he persevered, and was living happily married to his husband until a devastating leukemia diagnosis in 2018 looked to ruin their future plans.

He was treated for the cancer with stem cell therapy, which involves replacing stem cells damaged by chemotherapy with healthy ones from a donor – when doctors spotted a unique opportunity to find a donor with a HIV-resistant genetic mutation.

Doctors were keen to see if they could replicate the success of previous patients who had been cured of HIV and cancer this way.

Paul Edmonds, 68, (pictured) became the fifth ever person to be cured of HIV after receiving a rare stem cell treatment

Paul Edmonds, 68, (pictured) became the fifth ever person to be cured of HIV after receiving a rare stem cell treatment

In February 2019, Mr Edmonds, received stem cells from his donor

In February 2019, Mr Edmonds, received stem cells from his donor

Mr Edmonds is one of only five to beat both diseases and the oldest person to do so.

‘I am extremely grateful… I can’t thank them enough,’ Mr Edmonds said of his doctors at City of Hope clinic in California.

Mr Edmonds, of Desert Hot Springs, Riverside County, was given a stem cell transplant, which is the final segment of treatment for blood cancers such as leukemia and lymphoma, where the blood-forming stem cells in a patient’s bone marrow have been killed off by radiation or chemotherapy.

Stem cells are special human cells with the ability to develop into many different cell types, such as muscle cells or brain cells.

Healthy, blood-generating stem cells from a donor with similar genes are transplanted into the patient, meaning they can start to create cancer-free blood.

In Mr Edmonds case, the donated stem cells also had a rare genetic mutation associated with resistance to HIV-1.

He was diagnosed with HIV and AIDS in 1988, during the peak of the nation’s epidemic, which he said felt like a death sentence.

‘People were dying within a few years of finding out they were positive,’ he said of his experience of AIDS in San Francisco in the 1980s. ‘A dark cloud was over the city.’

Mr Edmonds had been on HIV antiretroviral therapy since 1997, which had suppressed his virus to undetectable amounts.

But the therapy does not fully cure HIV, so the virus was always present in his immune cells in the blood.

This means that if the therapy is stopped, the virus begins to multiply and will become detectable in the blood again.

In 2018, he was diagnosed with leukemia. Older patients with HIV often develop blood cancers because of their weakened immune systems.

Mr Edmonds’ cancer – acute myeloid leukaemia (AML) – is a type of blood cancer that starts in young white blood cells in the bone marrow.

Approximately 19,500 new cases occur every year in the US.

Symptoms can include fatigue, fever, frequent infections, bruising or bleeding easily, including nosebleeds or heavy periods, and weight loss.

AML’s exact cause is unclear.

Transplant patients must first enter remission for cancer, which usually needs intense chemotherapy so that cancerous cells are gotten rid of.

Giving chemotherapy to patients taking IV antiretroviral therapy, as Mr Edmonds was, can be tricky because chemotherapy can briefly reduce a patient’s immune system.

In November 2018, Mr Edmonds started chemotherapy. He needed three rounds to reach remission, which was achieved in mid-January 2019.

The next month, Mr Edmonds, received stem cells from his donor.

The stem cells he was given had two copies of a rare genetic mutation called CCR5 delta-3, which makes people resistant to HIV.

Only one to two percent of the population have this mutation.

HIV uses the receptor CCR5 to get into and assault the immune system, but the CCR5 mutation stops the virus from entering this way.

The transplant completely switched Mr Edmond’s bone marrow and blood stem cells with ones from the donor.

Since the transplant, he has shown no signs of AML or HIV.

Mr Edmonds is one of just five people worldwide who has gone into HIV remission from a stem cell transplant.

‘City of Hope’s case demonstrates that it is possible to achieve remission from HIV even at an older age and after living with HIV for many years,’ said Dr Jana Dickter, a clinical professor in City of Hope’s Division of Infectious Diseases.

‘Furthermore, remission can be achieved with a lower-intensity regimen than the therapy received by the four other patients who went into remission for HIV and cancer.’

‘As people with HIV continue to live longer, there will be more opportunities for personalized treatments for their blood cancers,’ she added.

The case was described in the New England Journal of Medicine.

Dr Stephen Forman, a professor in the Department of Hematology & Hematopoietic Cell Transplantation, said the hospital was ‘not stopping there.’

‘Our researchers are working on creating stem cells that have the genetic mutation that makes them naturally resistant to HIV, among other research initiatives,’ he said.

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This post first appeared on Daily mail