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New HHV-6 NIH grants awarded in 2017

Two new NIH grants awarded for studies related to HHV-6A and CNS disease. A Stanford group was also funded to develop whole genome sequencing platform to study HHV-6 and four other viruses post-transplant.

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New study details devastating impact of HHV-6 encephalitis

Investigators in Japan studied 145 patients who developed HHV-6 encephalitis. At 100 days after transplantation, the overall survival rate was just 58.3%, compared with 80.5% for patients who did not develop encephalitis. High-dose antiviral therapy was shown to mitigate high mortality rates in these patients.

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Multiple herpesvirus infections lead to telomere shortening

Investigators at Kings College London report that seropositivity for CMV, Herpes simplex 1 and HHV-6 are all associated with a significant shortening of telomeres over a three-year period. Furthermore, the magnitude of the changes was large. For example, CMV seropositivity was associated with the equivalent of almost 12 years of chronological age.

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Latent HHV-6A may impair myelin repair in multiple sclerosis

A group at University of Rochester demonstrated that the HHV-6A latency gene, U94, inhibits migration of cells involved in myelin repair. Inefficient myelin repair is associated with progression MS, and the ability of HHV-6A to impede this process suggests that it could be involved in the progression of MS, and raises questions about the virus’s role in other chronic demyelinating diseases.