Parents of 6 - year - old Emily Whitehead granted treatment for children with leukemia. He was said to be unable to do anything more and was sent to receive hospice care.
After the injection she recovered her health within a few weeks and relaxed for 5 years.
The pioneer of BioMedica, derived from Oxford University, invented the technology to manipulate and reprogram the HIV virus to kill cancer cells.
Two weeks later, the US Food and Drug Administration advances treatment to the panel and recommends full approval.
John Dawson, CEO of BioMedica, believes that breakthrough treatment brings green light
In the United States, analysts claim that treatment costs for each patient may be up to 308,000 pounds, and companies in the UK will receive royalties for each treatment.
This therapy is called CTL019 in the scientific community and is done by a 6-year-old child named Emily Whitehead.
Aggressive chemotherapy can not treat her acute lymphoblastic leukemia, she was sent to take hospice care
Her desperate parents consented to experimental treatment - after the injection - she went home and played with her family
In 1995, two professors Alan and Susan Kingsmann, who are professors at the Department of Biochemistry at Oxford University, established a company.
Glaxo Smith Kline, Sanofi, Orchard Therapeutics, etc. Oxford branch partners, originally founded to find cancer treatments
He said: "They need to know that this has changed our lives, changed the world, and gave hope to our family.
"The doctor never tells you what will happen in the long run, but when she gets up in the morning everything is normal, it's like a parent."
Kyriacos Mitrophanous, Oxford Biomedica's chief scientific officer, explains how revolutionary treatment works.
"We ingest HIV virus and eliminate all the factors that cause it, but we retain the ability to introduce genes and DNA into cells."
Cells in the body can be programmed with a single injection to find cancer cells and destroy them.
Other success stories include Tori Lee, New Jersey, which returned to school one month after treatment.
According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, "HIV stands for human immunodeficiency virus, weakening the human immune system by destroying important cells that fight disease and infection, effective treatment for HIV Improvement of HIV is an important aspect of breeding right, as viruses may be infected during pregnancy or childbirth or breast milk.WHO says, "All women, including people living with HIV, Obtain information, education and instruments to determine the number and intervals of children freely and responsibly and to enable these rights to be exercised ". Reproductive rights and health of people living with HIV are very important. There are four major problems in relation between HIV and reproductive rights.
AIDS (acquired immunodeficiency syndrome) is caused by human immunodeficiency virus (HIV). It kills or hurts the cells of the immune system and gradually destroys the body's ability to fight infections and certain types of cancer. The most common form of HIV is sexual contact with infected partners. Another important means of infecting HIV is exposure to infected blood or other drug addicts from contaminated needles, syringes. The term AIDS applies to the most advanced stage of HIV infection. The current definition of AIDS includes all HIV-infected individuals with less than 200 CD4 + T cells (healthy adults usually have about 800 or more CD4 + T cell numbers). In addition, the definition includes HIV patients diagnosed with one or more clinical symptoms (including opportunistic infections and certain cancers) that affect patients with advanced HIV disease.