Science

Aboriginal Australians, Neglected by Doctors, Carry the Deadly Virus HTLV-1

HTLV-1 is nothing new.

A deadly virus has infected around 40 percent of adults in rural Aboriginal communities in Australia, and its spread is causing alarm. It’s nothing new, however: The reason it’s got public health officials so distressed is that, even though it’s been around for decades, doctors haven’t done much about it. Human T-cell leukemia virus type 1 — HTLV-1 — can cause numerous life-threatening diseases such as adult T-cell leukemia/lymphoma and lead to other bacterial and viral infections.

Fortunately, at least one scientist has taken notice. In one of the first community-scale studies of HTLV-1 in Central Australia, Dr. Lloyd Einsiedel, the head of infection and chronic disease at the Baker Heart and Diabetes Institute in Melbourne, Australia, has found that infection rates among Aboriginal Australians living in rural communities are shockingly high. The virus, a retrovirus like HIV, inserts its RNA into the host’s cells and can be transmitted in blood and breast milk, as well as through unprotected sex. The new study, which started in July 2015, will wrap up in June, but initial results paint a grim picture.

Aboriginal Australians living in Alice Springs are part of a new effort to control HTLV-1.

YouTube/ Baker Heart and Diabetes Institute

Einsiedel’s research so far indicates that over 40 percent of adults in a rural Aboriginal community have HTLV-1. Thirty percent of these adults have diseases that are likely caused by the virus, demonstrating how most people can carry the virus without showing symptoms. Since the virus can be passed from mother to child, roughly five percent of people are infected this way, which puts patients at a higher risk of developing leukemia. In March, Einsiedel first-authored a paper in the journal PLOS Neglected Tropical Diseases linking HTLV-1 to chronic lung diseases and increased risk of death. Until now, though, doctors hadn’t focused on helping Aboriginal communities understand this public health risk. Now, Einsiedel hopes to put this knowledge into action.

“One of the puzzling things about the virus is that we’ve known about this since 1988, and yet there’s no public health strategy to control transmission among Aboriginal people,” says Einsiedel in a video on the Baker Institute’s YouTube channel published in January. “Aboriginal people haven’t been told that HTLV-1 is prevalent in their communities, so that’s something we’re doing, but it has to be done in a very careful way. After 30 years of doing very little, it’s hard to suddenly dump this on people.”

As Aboriginal people in Australia have been historically oppressed, perhaps it’s not such a mystery after all why this virus has been neglected. Times are changing, though, so along with community-level epidemiological research, Einsiedel’s team employs and works alongside Aboriginal Australians to develop culturally-appropriate educational materials that can help break this news and empower communities to work toward strengthening their own health.

“This is a problem that has to be managed with Aboriginal people,” says Einsiedel, “and ultimately giving Aboriginal people control over how the message is put out.”

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