Hepatitis Drug Breakthrough
Lazyhound writes "The BBC reports that scientists at the University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center in Dallas are running clinical trials on a new drug (similar to those used to treat HIV patients) that can dramatically reduce levels of the virus in only days."
A vaccine would prevent contraction of the disease. This drug treats those who already have it.
If the virus makes defective copies of itself is there a lessened chance of transmission? It seems they would still be a carrier of the disease but could they transmit it? If the virus is crippled and could not infect new cells it would seem contact with contaminated blood would be much less dangerous.
We still have to remember that Hepatitis C is an RNA virus like HIV. RNA is inherently more unstable than DNA and thus undergo mutations at a much higher frequency. Just like the more effective treatments for HIV consist of cocktail mixtures (ie. AZT and ddI) the virus may still mutate into forms in which the inhibiting compounds no longer become effective. We certainly don't need these more resistant viruses being propogated!
'Breakthrough' may provide a clue as to what the article is referring to.