Wednesday, March 6, 2019

London patient may be second in world to be cured of HIV
Milestone From Bone-Marrow Transplant Shows Cure’s Possible


Apoorva Mandavilli

06.03.2019

For just the second time since the global epidemic began, a patient appears to have been cured of infection with HIV, the virus that causes AIDS. The news comes nearly 12 years to the day after the first patient known to be cured, a feat that researchers have long tried, and failed, to duplicate. The surprise success now confirms that a cure for HIV infection is possible, if difficult, researchers said.

The report is to be published on Tuesday in the journal ‘Nature’ and investigators to present some of the details at the Conference on Retroviruses and Opportunistic Infections in Seattle.

Publicly, the scientists are describing the case as a longterm remission. In interviews, most experts are calling it a cure, with the caveat that it is hard to know how to define the word when there are only two known instances.

Both milestones resulted from bone-marrow transplants given to infected patients. But the transplants were intended to treat cancer in the patients, not HIV.

Bone-marrow transplantation is unlikely to be a realistic treatment option in the near future. Powerful drugs are now available to control HIV infection, while the transplants are risky, with harsh side effects that can last for years.

But rearming the body with immune cells similarly modified to resist HIV might well succeed as a practical treatment, experts said.

“This will inspire people that cure is not a dream,” said Dr Annemarie Wensing, a virologist at the University Medical Center Utrecht in the Netherlands. “It’s reachable.”Dr. Wensing is co-leader of IciStem, a consortium of European scientists studying stem cell transplants to treat HIV infection. The consortium is supported by AMFAR, the American AIDS research organization.The new patient has chosen to remain anonymous, and the scientists referred to him only as the “London patient.”

“I feel a sense of responsibility to help the doctors understand how it happened so they can develop the science,” he told The New York Times in an email. Learning that he could be cured of both cancer and HIV infection was “surreal” and “overwhelming,” he added. “I never thought that there would be a cure during my lifetime.”

At the same conference in 2007, a German doctor described the first such cure in the “Berlin patient,” later identified as Timothy Ray Brown, 52, who now lives in Palm Springs, California.

That news, displayed on a poster at the back of a conference room, initially gained little attention. Once it became clear that Brown was cured, scientists set out to duplicate his result with other cancer patients infected with HIV.

In case after case, the virus came roaring back, often around nine months after the patients stopped taking antiretroviral drugs, or else the patients died of cancer. The failures left scientists wondering whether Brown’s cure would remain a fluke. Brown had had leukemia, and after chemotherapy failed to stop it, he needed two bone-marrow transplants. The transplants were from a donor with a mutation in a protein called CCR5, which rests on the surface of certain immune cells. HIV uses the protein to enter those cells but cannot latch on to the mutated version.

Mr. Brown was given harsh immunosuppressive drugs of a kind that are no longer used, and suffered intense complications for months after the transplant. He was placed in an induced coma at one point and nearly died.

“He was really beaten up by the whole procedure,” said Dr. Steven Deeks, an AIDS expert at the University of California, San Francisco, who has treated Mr. Brown. “And so we’ve always wondered whether all that conditioning, a massive amount of destruction to his immune system, explained why Timothy was cured but no one else.”

The London patient has answered that question: A near-death experience is not required for the procedure to work. He had Hodgkin’s lymphoma and received a bonemarrow transplant from a donor with the CCR5 mutation in May 2016. He, too, received immunosuppressive drugs, but the treatment was much less intense, in line with current standards for transplant patients.

He quit taking anti-HIV drugs in September 2017, making him the first patient since Brown known to remain virus-free for over a year after stopping.

“I think this does change the game a little bit,” said Dr. Ravindra Gupta, a virologist at University College London who presented the findings at the Seattle meeting. “Everybody believed after the Berlin patient that you needed to nearly die basically to cure HIV, but now you don’t,” said Ravindra Gupta, a virologist at University College London.

Although the London patient was not as ill as Brown had been after the transplant, the procedure worked about as well: The transplant destroyed the cancer without harmful side effects.

So far, scientists are tracking 38 HIV-infected people who have received bone-marrow transplants, including six from donors without the mutation. The London patient is 36 on this list. Number 19 on the list, referred to as the “Düsseldorf patient,” has been off anti-HIV drugs for four months. Details of that case will be presented at the Seattle conference later this week.

The consortium’s scientists have repeatedly analysed the London patient’s blood for signs of the virus. They saw a weak indication of continued infection in one of 24 tests, but say this may be the result of contamination in the sample.

The most sensitive test did not find any circulating virus. Antibodies to HIV were still present in his blood, but their levels declined, in a trajectory similar to that seen in Brown. None of this guarantees that the London patient is forever out of the woods, but the similarities to Brown’s recovery offer reason for optimism, Gupta said. NYT



Scientists have long tried to duplicate the procedure that led to the first long-term remission 12 years ago
High court directs all postmortems in state to be videographed

TIMES NEWS NETWORK

Madurai:06.03.2019

The Madurai bench of the Madras high court has granted an interim direction to videograph all the postmortems which are performed in the state after a petitioner raised concerns about the credibility of the reports and sought a direction to record all postmortems.

In his public interest litigation (PIL), R M Arun Swaminathan, an advocate and a resident of Madurai stated that he suspected the nature of postmortems performed at government hospitals.

When the petition was heard on Tuesday, Swaminathan stated that when examining the postmortem reports of four different people, it was found out that all four had the same identification marks. He said that it raises suspicion whether the postmortems were performed or the reports were just copy-pasted by just changing the name and father’s name of the deceased.

He further claimed that nearly 700 postmortem certificates of Government Rajaji Hospital (GRH) were not signed and they are yet to be sent to the concerned police stations. He also stated that though two postings of scientific officers have to be appointed in each of the 24 government medical colleges in the state, the present strength is only three.
Anna varsity’s exam system may not allay quality concerns

Adarsh Jain   06.03.2019  Times of India

For long, the quality of engineering graduates produced by Anna University and its affiliated colleges has come under question. To tide over this the institution is putting in place the most stringent assessment system, expecting every student to score 90%.

While the intention is to improve overall quality, what raises concern among educationists is the blindfolded approach with focus on marks instead of learning. Last week, Anna University announced that a student failing in a subject thrice would have to redo the entire four-year course.

While some, like education consultant Moorthy Selvakumaran, say this is the standard procedure followed across the country, others feel failure of a student is a reflection of the academic system and should be addressed thus. “The fact that a student has not been able to pass the subject is not just his/her responsibility. It is equally the fault of the teacher. One must be allowed to sit for the classes again for that subject,” said principal of a Salem-based college. Until now each semester exam had two sections. The first part comprised 10 twomark questions and the second part had five 16-mark questions.

According to the new rule, the second part is tweaked, with six questions, of which five are of 13 marks each and the last creative question is for 15 marks.

“While increasing difficulty level to test knowledge is good, the university should understand that creating a balance is also crucial,” said a professor of a Coimbatorebased college.

The issue came to light when results of the first semester examination were published. Teachers and students were appalled with the performance in engineering mathematics. “Our college’s average performance without mathematics is 80%, but if we include mathematics it drops to 35%,” said a professor from Namakkal.

“I do not question the degree of difficulty of the curriculum. It is important to revise the syllabus to stay updated,” he said but also stressed on the unstated rule that a paper usually has 25% questions with high difficulty to ensure an average 60% of the students can clear the exam. Experts state that each class has students of different calibre and interests.

Further, while the intention of the last question, which has to be answered creatively, is good, its point is lost as the duration of the exam is limited. “Writing six detailed answers along with 10 short ones in three hours is a big ask,” said the professor.

To bring in a more application-based, creative and flexible assessment, experts suggest decentralization of the examination system. Akin to universities abroad that give 60% weightage to internal assessment of assignments, seminars, tests and quizzes instead of one written exam. The evaluation is also transparent as the revaluation can be done in front of the student.

About five years ago, Anna University, took away the powers of its regional centres to conduct exams. “There are many institutions who exploit the decentralized system. They intend to produce only degree holders, not employable graduates,” said a mechanical engineering professor and principal. “Anna University needs to create a system where any malpractice in the examination process is identifiable,” he added.

The colleges have made representations to the Anna University management. “We are expecting that there will be some changes. The best solution would be to have an independent board that does not involve people holding positions in institutions to frame regulations and monitor the system,” said the principal from Salem.

(The author is a freelancer)

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Counselling for PG med students to begin on Mar 15

TIMES NEWS NETWORK

Chennai:06.03.2019

Counselling for post-graduate medical students for the all-India quota, deemed universities, central universities, ESIC and AFMC will begin on March 15, a schedule released by the Directorate General of Health Services said.

Registration for the online counselling opens on March 15 and results of the first round of counselling will be available on March 27. The process for second round will begin on April 5 and the results will be available on April 12. While there will be no third round of counselling for government seats under the all-India quota, mop-up rounds will be held for central, deemed and ESIC colleges. While vacant seats will be returned to the states for counselling by April 22, other universities will receive it after mop-up by May 27. The stray vacancy round of counselling will be completed by May 31.

Counselling date for the state, however, is yet to be announced by the Directorate of Medical Education. It will be made after the state Health Department passes a GO on the incentive marks for in-service candidates.

A committee chaired by retired judge A Selvam has recommended incentives for doctors working in hilly regions, remote and rural areas, with a maximum of 30% additional marks over their PG NEET scores. “The recommendation is with the government. It can be implemented only if it is issued as a GO by the state health department,” said director of medical education Dr A Edwin Joe.

The National Board of Examination summary shows that of the 79,633 who qualified, 11,121 were from Tamil Nadu, which also had the most candidates (17,067) who appeared, compared to 9,219 from Karnataka, 7,441 from Maharashtra and 6,323 from Andhra Pradesh. Though qualifying in the exam may not guarantee seats, educationists say the high numbers give TN candidates more opportunity to get placed in premium colleges outside the state and increases the possibility of more state candidates getting seats in TN government colleges.

The directorate of medical education received the Centre’s permission, from the board of governors in supersession of the Medical Council of India, on Thursday to convert 384 of its 396 PG diploma seats into PG degree seats. In addition, the state has permission to start 124 new PG degree courses across 14 staterun medical colleges. In all, government medical colleges will have 1,758 post-graduate seats in 2019. The state will have about 870 PG degree government college seats in its kitty after offering an equal number to the DGHS for the all-India counselling.

Registration for the online counselling will open on March 15 and results of first round of counselling will be available on March 27

Tuesday, March 5, 2019

Board of Governors of Homoeopathy Council

After MCI, Cabinet extends tenure of Homeopathy Council Board Of Governors

March 3, 2019

New Delhi: Through a recent ordinance, the government has called for the extension of the tenure of the Board of Governors that were appointed last year to run the scam tainted Central Council of Homoeopathy.

The Union Cabinet, chaired by the Prime Minister Narendra Modi has approved the draft Homoeopathy Central Council (Amendment) Ordinance, 2019 which seeks to extend the period for reconstitution of the Central Council from existing period of one year to two years so that the tenure of the Board of Governors may be extended for a further period of one year with effect from 17th May, 2019 for exercising the powers and performing the functions of the Central Council of Homoeopathy (CCH).

Last year in May 2018, the Union Cabinet had approved the ordinance to replace the Central Council of Homeopathy with a National Commission of Homeopathy in order to install more transparency and accountability in the system of homeopathy in the country.

The Commission, similar to the National Medical Commission, comprised of seven persons-eminent homeopathy practitioners and administrators, and were be appointed by the government. Their initial tenure was fixed to be one year

The move came in response to the growing allegations of corruption against office bearers of the CCH.

Now with the fresh ordinance, the government has extended the tenure of the Board of Governors by another year.

The move by the government is based on the Parliamentary Standing Committee on Health, which observed that conformation to prescribed standards of homoeopathy education has been compromised due to legal infirmities in the governing statute.

The committee had recommended that “the oversight of maintenance of standards should be done with the utmost transparency and there should be a credible and vibrant appeal mechanism in place so that minor technical and procedural defaults are not made a basis for harassment and questionable practices and genuine grievances of homoeopathy medical institutions are addressed swiftly within set timelines.

DNB for Foreign PGs

Introducing DNB exam for foreign PG Medical Graduates: MCI Board of Governors mull proposal

March 3, 2019

New Delhi: In order to provide a level playing field to medical practitioners who complete their post-graduation and specialisations from various countries outside India, the Medical Council of India Board of Governors are now mulling over a proposal to consider introducing DNB examination for candidates qualifying PG degree from foreign nations other than five English speaking countries.

PG Medical Degrees from 5 English speaking countries including the  US, the UK, Australia, New Zealand and Canada are considered equivalent to MD/MS degrees in India. However, the same is not true for PG medical qualifications from other countries apart from these 5, with no benchmark on how these degrees are to be considered in India. In absence of regulations, these PG medical degrees from countries apart from those recognised by MCI have no value in India

The issue was recently taken up by the MCI Board of Governors in their December 2018 meeting, where the BOG mulled on the idea of equating these degrees to DNB

The BoG considered the issue relating to shortage of specialist in the Country and decided in-principle that Indian/OCI PG doctors planning to return/wish to render their services to the Country may be allowed to enter in the mainstream by facilitating registration of their PG qualification by equating it to DNB.

The matter was considered in the meeting and BOG has decide to consider introducing DNB examination for candidates qualifying PG degree from foreign nations other than five English speaking countries

In view of the foregoing the BoG decided to nominate Dr Randeep Guleria, Dr Nikhil Tandon and Dr S Venkatesh, BoG Members, who are also NBE members, to workout detailed modalities in consultation with NBE leadership for allowing the Indian OCI Doctors who possess foreign PG qualification to take DNB examination without undergoing three years DNB training at NBE accreditated hospital India.

Monday, March 4, 2019

Medical university dean summoned over certificates
TNN | Updated: Aug 22, 2018, 08:52 IST

CHENNAI: The Tamil Nadu Medical Council has summoned the dean of a deemed universityfor discrepancies in the internship completion certificates the varsity issued to at least three students who passed out in 2017 and 2018.

All MBBS students must complete compulsory rotatory residential internship for a year in hospitals attached to the college or any approved hospital. During the internship, students are given ‘temporary’ registration certificates and will have to show completion certifications to register as doctors.

In April, a student from 
Saveetha Medical College and Hospital approached the council for permanent registration. “In January, the student had applied for six months extension to complete her internship. But he is said to have completed the course by April,” said council president Dr K Senthil. The student produced two certificates that had discrepancies pertaining to the dates on which he attended some wards. The council also found at least two other students whose certificates had similar discrepancies.

On Tuesday, the council’s disciplinary committee summoned hospital dean Dr T Gunasagaran about one of the students. During inquiry, Gunasagaran said the student was irregular and that he approached the council for a six-month extension after completing nine months of internship.

“It was only to ensure that if he further absented himself he did not have to go back for extension. I told them I had no mala fide intentions,” Gunasagaran told TOI. “At our university at least 30% of students are given repeat internships because we give rigorous training.”

The committee, however, asked the college to submit daily log sheets of the student’s work in a week. “It is important to maintain log sheets to prove the student had adequate attendance,” said Senthil.

The council has also decided that it will not register students without checking their names on the registers of medical colleges, universities and Medical Council of India. “This will ensure there are no fake certificates or registrations,” Senthil said.

Section of Anna University PhD scholars excluded from convocation

Section of Anna University PhD scholars excluded from convocation Scholars who completed their viva after this date will be awarded degrees ...