                          AIDS Daily Summary
                           March 24, 1995


The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) National AIDS
Clearinghouse makes available the following information as a public
service only. Providing this information does not constitute endorsement
by the CDC, the CDC Clearinghouse, or any other organization. Reproduction
of this text is encouraged; however, copies may not be sold, and the CDC
Clearinghouse should be cited as the source of this information.
Copyright 1995, Information, Inc., Bethesda, MD


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"Pfizer and Myco to Develop Fungus Drugs"
"AIDS Vaccine Research Faces a New Setback"
"AIDS Rate Increasing Faster Among Women Than Men, Study Shows"
"World's First AIDS Case May be False--British Paper"
"Court Bans Dentist from Refusing AIDS Patients"
"U.N. Agency Boosts Anti-AIDS Project in Vietnam"
"Study Calls for Tracking Partners of HIV Victims"
"'Thank You for Pot Smoking'"
"Prophylaxis Against Pneumocystis Carinii Pneumonia at Higher 
CD4+ T-Cell Counts"
"Curtains for New York Sex Clubs?"
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"Pfizer and Myco to Develop Fungus Drugs"
New York Times (03/24/95) P. D5;  Fisher, Lawrence M.
     On Thursday, Pfizer Inc. announced that it had agreed to 
collaborate with Myco Pharmaceuticals Inc. in the development of 
antifungal drugs.  Under the agreement, Pfizer will develop, 
manufacture, and market any antifungal drugs discovered, and will
provide Myco with funds for research and development totaling 
more than $20 million over four years.  Pfizer will own just 
under 15 percent of Myco and Pfizer will make product-based 
milestone payments to Myco that could exceed $30 million.  The 
number of fungal infections nearly doubled between 1980 and 1990,
the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention said.  
Opportunistic fungal infections are increasing, due to increases 
in immunosuppressive diseases, such as AIDS, and the use of 
immunosuppressive drugs and treatments such as chemotherapy.  
Related Story: Wall Street Journal (03/24) P. B2
      
"AIDS Vaccine Research Faces a New Setback"
USA Today (03/24/95) P. 1A;  Levy, Doug
     An experimental AIDS vaccine that appeared to work in adult 
monkeys kills newborn monkeys, scientists report in the current 
issue of the journal Science.  Previous studies in adult monkeys 
were encouraging to scientists who believe a weakened version of 
HIV could be used in the vaccine.  However, the study--which used
a weakened form of the virus that causes AIDS in 
monkeys--suggests that such a strategy could lead to infection 
instead.  "This approach to an AIDS vaccine is full of hidden 
danger," said Dr. Ruth Ruprecht of Harvard University and the 
Dana-Farber Cancer Institute.  Ruprecht's team administered a 
vaccine of virus that causes AIDS in monkeys with key genes 
removed to four newborn monkeys.  Although none were exposed to 
normal HIV, two died of the disease and two have severe immune 
deficiency.
      
"AIDS Rate Increasing Faster Among Women Than Men, Study Shows"
USA Today (03/24/95) P. 7A;  Elias, Marilyn
     As many heterosexuals continue to have unsafe sex, the number of 
women in the United States with AIDS is likely to keep 
increasing, a researcher will report today.  In 1994, 18 percent 
of AIDS patients were female--almost three times the rate 10 
years ago.  The number is increasing fastest among women infected
by heterosexual contact, the Centers for Disease Control and 
Prevention said.  Joseph Catania of the University of California 
Medical School in San Francisco says that a one-year study of 
4,539 heterosexuals in 26 cities demonstrates "widespread 
practices that put people at risk for HIV and sexually 
transmitted diseases."  Catania found that 56 percent of the 
subjects under the age of 30 had multiple partners by the end of 
year.  He also found that only one-third of the men having 
extramarital affairs wore condoms.
      
"World's First AIDS Case May be False--British Paper"
Reuters (03/24/95)
     Proof of the world's first AIDS case--a Briton who died in the 
1950s--may have been false, the Independent Paper said today.  
The discovery may undermine accepted thinking about the origins 
of HIV and how the global AIDS epidemic began, the paper said.  A
member of the British research team which published the original 
study in 1990 said he stood by his work and could not understand 
the discrepancy.  Some U.S. scientists, however, believe that the
tissue samples used by the British-based researchers in the 
original analysis were not from the 1959 patient but from an AIDS
patient who died around 1990.  According to the paper, 
researchers from the New York University School of Medicine 
repeatedly tried but failed to detect HIV in tissue taken from 
the man's corpse.  Experts says the strain of HIV found could not
have existed more than 30 years ago because of the speed at which
viruses mutate.  The team also determined that the samples used 
in the 1990 research came from a different person than the man 
who died in 1959.
      
"Court Bans Dentist from Refusing AIDS Patients"
Reuters (03/24/95)
     In what the Justice Department called a landmark case, a federal 
court ruled Thursday that a Louisiana dentist who refused to 
treat AIDS patients violated the Americans with Disabilities Act 
(ADA).  The decision prohibits Dr. Drew Morvant from 
discriminating against people with AIDS by refusing to treat them
or referring them to other dentists.  This was the first suit 
brought by the Justice Department under the ADA.  In an October 
1993 lawsuit, the Justice Department claimed that Morvant denied 
dental services to two men, both of whom were told that the 
office did not treat HIV-infected patients.  The Centers for 
Disease Control and Prevention and the American Dental 
Association have released policy guidelines saying there is no 
medical justification for excluding people from treatment solely 
on the basis of their HIV or AIDS status.
      
"U.N. Agency Boosts Anti-AIDS Project in Vietnam"
Reuters (03/23/95)
     Under an agreement signed Thursday, the United Nations 
Development Programme (UNDP) will give $1 million to Vietnam to 
help coordinate foreign aid for its fight against AIDS.  The 
two-year program will involve information exchanges between donor
agencies and training for officials involved in the anti-AIDS 
drive.  UN agencies have warned of an outbreak of AIDS in 
Vietnam, with 15,000 deaths predicted by 1998.  The first AIDS 
case in Vietnam was reported in 1990.  Fifty-four people have 
died of the disease so far.
      
"Study Calls for Tracking Partners of HIV Victims"
Reuters (03/23/95)
     A new report demonstrates the scope of the AIDS epidemic by 
linking one HIV-infected prisoner with 142 people through a chain
of sexual encounters or shared syringes.  Fifty of those people 
were found to be infected with HIV and 24 were unaware of their 
infection, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) 
said.  "Despite what a lot of people think, people who do inject 
drugs and people who are in prison will accept partner 
notification services when they're offered to them," said Kathy 
Waldron of the University of Pittsburgh's AIDS education and 
training center, one of the authors of the report.  Waldron said 
it was much easier to track HIV exposure in prisons than among 
the general population.  Almost 90 percent of the 142 people 
identified through contact tracing were drug users and 75 percent
were present or former inmates who had been infected before they 
were imprisoned.  Health departments should provide voluntary 
confidential HIV testing and should have a good working 
relationship with prisons, the CDC concluded.
      
"'Thank You for Pot Smoking'"
Richmond Times-Dispatch (03/23/95) P. A1
     AIDS, cancer, and glaucoma patients come to the San Francisco 
Cannabis Buyer's Club to buy and smoke the illegal drug they 
claim is one of the few things that give them relief.  To become 
a member, patients must provide a doctor's letter certifying a 
condition that could be alleviated by marijuana.  The drug is 
purchased underground and is thus more expensive than growing it 
oneself.  Club founder Dennis Peron, however, says the prices are
about 50 percent less expensive than street prices.  The club's 
members represent many different races, backgrounds, and ages.  
Bob, for example, is a 36-year-old AIDS patient who comes to the 
club for the marijuana that keeps his appetite up and the support
that boosts his spirit.  Similar clubs have been formed in other 
major U.S. cities, said Bob Randall of the Alliance for Cannabis 
Therapeutics.
      
"Prophylaxis Against Pneumocystis Carinii Pneumonia at Higher 
CD4+ T-Cell Counts"
Journal of the American Medical Association (03/15/95) Vol. 273, 
No. 11, P. 848;  Chu, Susan Y.;  Hanson, Debra L.;  Ciesielski, 
Carol et al.
     Some members of the U.S. Public Health Service Task Force feel 
that prophylaxis for Pneumocystis carinii pneumonia (PCP) could 
be considered in patients with CD4 counts greater than 200, write
Chu et al. of the Adolescent and Adult HIV Spectrum of Disease 
Project Group at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, 
in a letter to the editor of the Journal of the American Medical 
Association.  Current recommendations for the prevention of PCP 
in HIV-infected individuals state that prophylaxis should begin 
when the CD4 level falls below 200.  Chu et al. estimated that 
out of 3101 initial PCP diagnoses, 5.6 percent of HIV-positive 
patients experienced their first episode when their CD4 counts 
were between 200 and 299.  If the estimate of 5.6 percent is 
applied to the 12,604 cases of PCP reported in the United States 
in 1992, 635 cases were potentially preventable, assuming a 90 
percent efficacy for primary prevention.  Based on data from the 
study, however, 262 cases would have first developed thrush, 
which is also considered a marker for initiating PCP prophylaxis.
Thus, a total of 373 PCP cases would be prevented if the 
guidelines were raised to a CD4 count of less than 300.  Although
the benefits of preventing additional cases of PCP are obvious, 
Chu et al. conclude, they must be balanced against the high 
frequency of adverse reactions to the medications given for a 
prolonged period of time and the implications of providing a 
large number of people medication to prevent a relatively small 
number of cases.
      
"Curtains for New York Sex Clubs?"
Advocate (03/21/95) No. 677, P. 20;  Morales, Jorge
     In February, AIDS activists united against the New York City 
health department, which is required to enforce the New York 
State Sanitary Code.  The code, which is posted all over sex 
clubs, warns patrons that it is illegal for them to have oral, 
anal, or vaginal sex on the premises.  "I think the city is 
clearly negligent in upholding the public-health law," said 
Darren Britton, the editor of the newsletter "Cure AIDS Update" 
and a founding member of Gay & Lesbian HIV Prevention 
Activists--a group formed to monitor gay commercial 
establishments for compliance with public health laws and 
safer-sex guidelines.  Britton said the laws have not been 
enforced because the department is afraid of being seen as 
insensitive to gay rights.  Margaret Hamburg, the city's health 
commissioner, said it was not "the politics of homophobia" that 
made the department move slowly in some instances, but "a 
question of...having a strong enough case for closure."  Although
other cities have also struggled with the problem of HIV 
transmission in bathhouses or sex clubs, New York's problem is 
compounded by staff cutbacks and underfunding of the health 
department, noted Mike Isbell, deputy executive director for 
public policy at Gay Men's Health Crisis--a nonprofit AIDS group.
      
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