British researchers used molecular dating methods to determine that most strains of iciHHV-6 come from a small number of ancient human ancestors; the youngest found lived over 24,000 years ago. These ancient strains vary considerably from modern non-inherited strains of HHV-6A and appear just as likely to activate as their more modern cousins.
HHV-6 shedding correlates negatively with IL-6 and other inflammatory cytokines in HIV+ patients on antiretroviral therapy
HIV+ patients on antiretrovrial therapy with high levels of HHV-6 shedding had lower levels of IL-6 and other inflammatory markers. While HIV+ patients had increased shedding of EBV and CMV, there was no difference in shedding between patients and controls for HHV-6.
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.
HHV-6 reactivation associated with fever after autologous transplantation
Half of autologous hematopoietic cell transplant patients with HHV-6 reactivation exhibit fever plus a collection of symptoms that include diarrhea, rash and pneumonia.
HHV-6B found in the islet cells of both type 1 diabetes patients and controls
Swedish investigators have found HHV-6 protein in the pancreatic islet cells of both type 1 diabetes patients and controls. The viral load was higher in the islet cells than in surrounding tissues. Unfortunately, they did not provide data on the difference between patients and controls in the viral load.
Review of HHV-6 in Liver Transplantation
HHV-6 infections in the liver transplant patients can’t be diagnosed in the blood. Ganciclovir prophylaxis for CMV cuts the rate of HHV-6 reactivation from 39% to 11%.
Similar prevalence of HHV-6A and HHV-6B found in African HIV+ patients
Prevalence of HHV-6A and HHV-6B was evenly divided in HIV+ patients in Western Africa, with over 6.3% positive for HHV-6 A and 5.0% for HHV-6B. HHV-6A was more common among those with a low viral HIV viral load.
Review of HHV-6 induced inflammatory cardiomyopathy in immunocompetent children
Although only a small number of pediatric cases have been reported in literature, the authors conclude that evidence suggests HHV-6 should be considered as a causative agent of inflammatory cardiomyopathy, particularly in young children (under 3 years of age) who might be experiencing a primary infection.
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.
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.
Blood virome sequencing reveals new data on roseolovirus prevalence and epidemiology
Sequencing of over 8,000 individuals were used to determined the prevalence of 94 different viruses. HHV-7 was the most common virus, with HHV-6B and HHV-6A 4th and 5th respectively.
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.
HHV-6 reactivation associated with longer hospital stays, more readmissions in Memorial Sloan Kettering Trial
T-cell depleted stem cell transplant patients at Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center with HHV-6 viremia, CMV viremia, or 2 or more viremias experienced longer hospital stays and were readmitted more often. HHV-6 was the most commonly reactivated virus, with 61% of patients affected patients .
Virus specific donor T cells found effective in treating HHV-6 and other viruses in Phase II clinical trial
“Off-the-shelf” donor T cells primed to fight five specific viruses were shown to be effective in a Phase 2 trial backed by Viracyte. A single infusion produced a complete or partial response rate of 92%.
In Japan, inherited ciHHV-6A likely derived from common ancestor
A team in Japan has reports that ciHHV-6A prevalence is influenced by a “founder effect” and is likely derived from a common ancestor. All of the individuals in the small study were found to have HHV-6A integrated into the telomeric region of chromosome 22, a common site of integration.