Inspired to Act: Inside a Scientist's Mission to Study
HIV in Ethiopia

Newswire | 3 December 2008

A simple speech changed one Temple University Scientist's life. Dr. Dianne
Langford, PhD explains why she chose to research the effects of HIV on the
brain in Ethiopia after a fateful encounter at an NIH conference.

Newswise — Some HIV patients suffer from terrible neurological disease. Then,
there are others that never have any cognitive problems at all. The same virus, but
very different responses. That’s why most days you can find Dianne Langford
working in a lab on Temple University’s campus, researching how HIV affects the
brain. But once a year, her research takes here around the world to Ethiopia. It’s a
country ravaged by HIV with little capacity to treat those infected, including infants
born to HIV positive mothers.
















“An Ethiopian baby is born with an immune cell count as high as any other baby, but
as they become adults, their cell count drops significantly below anybody else’s in
the world and we don’t know why,” says Langford, Ph.D., assistant professor of
neuroscience and neurovirology at Temple University School of Medicine. “It’s a
population with unique characteristics not found in other African populations or any
other population in the world tested so far.”

It is also a population suffering because of HIV. Federal figures show nearly one
million people are living with HIV/AIDS in Ethiopia. And while AIDS killed 67,000
Ethiopians last year, it’s most devastating toll is on the children, leaving some
650,000 as orphans. Researchers trying to learn more about the killer disease are
hampered since, for cultural and religious reasons, autopsies are rare.

That’s why little is known about HIV-1C, a subtype of the virus which accounts for
more than 50 % of HIV infections all over the world. It is the most dominant form of
the virus, yet it is only found in Ethiopia, sub-Saharan Africa and India. And it is very
different from subtype B, the form of the HIV found in this country. HIV-1C may be
different in its progression and how it affects the brain, which is why Langford
focused on Ethiopia. For the past five years, she’s volunteered through the non-
profit People To People, a non-governmental organization dedicated to easing the
burden of the HIV/AIDS epidemic in Ethiopia and other sub-Saharan countries, but it’
s a mission that happened more by chance than choice.

“I was at an international NIH meeting in Baltimore in 2003 and people were giving
power point presentations using all kinds of fancy graphics,” says Langford. “Then,
a soft-spoken Ethiopian woman stood up and spoke about HIV in her home country.
No presentations; just her own experiences and I was so impressed.”

Minutes after that woman’s presentation, Langford met the head of People To
People, Dr. Enawgaw Mehari. She doesn’t know what made her say yes, but she
found herself agreeing to go to Ethiopia. Three months later, she was on a plane for
her first trip there to see in person the effects of HIV. And in the five years since that
fateful encounter, she has worked with scientists at Addis Ababa University School
of Medicine in Ethiopia to secure a $250,000 NIH grant to study what HIV-1C does to
the brains of Ethiopians. As she has crossed continents, she has also lifted taboos.
Government officials in Ethiopia agreed to allow her team to perform 200 autopsies
to date.

“There was a lot of legal wrangling and delays, but we finally did the autopsies and
we’re on the right track to finding out more about this devastating disease,” says
Langford. “It mutates from patient to patient, within a patient and even as it travels
around the globe and that’s why it’s so hard to find a vaccine.”

It may be hard, but Langford and her fellow researchers are determined to learn
how and why HIV-1C is different from other subtypes. Their work could make a
difference in how doctors treat the virus. Until then, Dianne Langford will continue on
her life’s mission, one inspired by one woman’s story.
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Photo: Dr. Dianne Langford with Tesfanesh, an AIDS orphan