Retrovirus, XMRV
Has science found the cause of
ME?
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Lead story in The Independent, 9 October 2009, by science editor Steve
Connor
Scientists say they have made a dramatic breakthrough in understanding
the cause of chronic fatigue syndrome – a debilitating condition
affecting 250,000 people in Britain which for decades has defied a
rational medical explanation.
The researchers have discovered a strong link between chronic fatigue
syndrome, which is sometimes known as ME or Myalgic Encephalomyelitis,
and an obscure retrovirus related to a group of viruses found to infect
mice.
Although the published data falls short of proving a definitive
cause-and-effect, one of the scientists behind the study said last night
that she was confident that further unpublished data she had gathered
over the past few weeks implicated the retrovirus as an important and
perhaps sole cause of the condition.
Chronic fatigue syndrome has blighted the lives of an estimated 17
million people worldwide because its symptoms, long-term tiredness and
aching limbs, do not go away with sleep or rest. Famous sufferers have
included the author and yachtswoman Clare Francis, the film director
Lord Puttnam, the pop singer Suzanne Shaw and the Labour politician
Yvette Cooper, who has made a full recovery.
The condition initially generated much controversy in the 1980s, when it
was known as "yuppie flu", because some medical authorities even doubted
whether it was a genuine physical illness. In the absence of a proven
cause, many scientists have questioned whether there could ever be one
reason behind so many different symptoms, so the latest research showing
a strong link to a single virus has generated intense excitement among
experts.
The study, published in the journal Science, shows that the virus,
called murine leukaemia virus-related virus (XMRV), was found in 68 of
101 patients from around the US with chronic fatigue syndrome. This
compared with just eight of 218 healthy "controls" drawn at random from
the same parts of the US, the scientists said.
But the senior author of the study, Judy Mikovits, director of research
at the Whittemore Peterson Institute in Reno, Nevada, said further blood
tests have revealed that more than 95 per cent of patients with the
syndrome have antibodies to the virus – indicating they have been
infected with XMRV, which can lie dormant within a patient's DNA. "With
those numbers, I would say, yes we've found the cause of chronic fatigue
syndrome. We also have data showing that the virus attacks the human
immune system," said Dr Mikovits. She is testing a further 500 blood
samples gathered from chronic fatigue patients diagnosed in London. "The
same percentages are holding up," she said.
If the findings are replicated by other groups and the XMRV virus is
accepted as a cause of chronic fatigue syndrome then it could be
possible to treat patients with antivirals, just like treating HIV, or
to develop a vaccine against the virus to protect people from developing
the condition, said Dr Mikovits.
"We now have compelling proof that a retrovirus named XMRV is present in
more than two-thirds of patient samples with chronic fatigue syndrome.
This finding could be a major step in the discovery of vital treatment
options for millions of patients," she said.
The genetic structure of the XMRV virus indicates that it has evolved
from a similar virus found in wild field mice. Dr Mikovits suggested it
could have jumped the "species barrier" from mouse to man like many
other human viruses, such as HIV, another retrovirus, which is thought
to have infected humans from monkeys or apes.
XMRV was originally found in men suffering from prostate cancer and it
was this discovery that led Dr Mikovits and her collaborators at the US
National Institutes of Health to test blood samples stored from patients
with chronic fatigue syndrome. "The discovery of XMRV in two major
diseases, prostate cancer and now chronic fatigue syndrome, is very
exciting. If cause-and-effect is established, there would be a new
opportunity for prevention and treatment of these diseases," said
Professor Robert Silverman, of the Cleveland Clinic in Ohio, who worked
on the fatigue syndrome study.
However, other researchers emphasised that the numbers published so far
are too small to conclude anything about the cause of chronic fatigue
syndrome. "It's spectacular but needs replication. And I hope that no
one is thinking of prescribing anti-retrovirals on the basis of this,"
said Simon Wessely, professor of psychological medicine at King's
College London. "It's very preliminary and there no evidence to say this
is relevant to the vast majority of people in the UK with the
condition."
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