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By Karen Ocamb
Photo by Linda Mason
(Editor's note: This is the first in
a series of interviews leading up to June 5, the 25th
anniversary of the first report published in the Centers
for Disease Control's Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report
(MMWR), marking the official start of the AIDS epidemic.
Dr. Michael Gottlieb, then a 33-year-old assistant professor
and immunology researcher at UCLA, was the lead author of
that 1981 report.)
In the late 1970s, post-Stonewall sexual freedom was at
its zenith. There were no restrictions and no one worried
about sexually transmitted diseases -- just line up for a
shot of penicillin from Hugh Rice at the Gay Community Services
Center's STD Clinic. But in 1979, Rice noticed that some
men looked painfully thin and one man showed up with spots
that turned out to be Kaposi's sarcoma. Later, Rice realized
they had Gay-Related Immune Deficiency (GRID), the first
name given to the mysterious illness that would later become
known as AIDS.
"He was probably right," Dr. Michael Gottlieb
told IN Los Angeles magazine. "I have a patient who
probably became infected in 1978, and we know in retrospect
that the virus was in the U.S. as early as 1977 and we know
there was a case in the Congo in 1959. So the irony is that
this viral illness from central Africa was discovered in
1981 in Westwood. But, in fact, it had been on U.S. shores
since 1977 and was just kind of a stealth epidemic for four
years in small numbers, but here undetected."
Gottlieb's first patient with the mysterious illness came
to him through the UCLA emergency room in November 1980. "I
was relatively new on faculty and I wanted to teach some
of the interns and post-doctoral fellows in immunology," Gottlieb
said. "We asked one of the residents to see a patient
-- any patient -- who might have a disease with an immunologic
feature. He let us see our own 'Patient Zero.' The patient
had fevers and weight loss and then there was this distinctly
uncommon Pneumocystis -- this bizarre organism filling up
the air space of his lungs.
"Once that patient was diagnosed with Pneumocystis
carinii pneumonia," Gottlieb continued, "word spread
through the grapevine to doctors in the community. That's
when I met with Joel [Weisman, a West L.A. internist] and
he referred two more patients who had weight loss and fevers.
And we diagnosed those two patients with Pneumocystis. We
also tested their T-cells, because having Pneumocystis implies
there's some T-cell problem, and discovered the now characteristic
depletion of CD4 cells. At that point, early in 1981, we
had three patients, three gay men in their early 30s, with
Pneumocystis -- and we all had the queasy feeling that this
was not going to be rare.
"We also knew from the experience of Joel and others
that there were many other gay men with enlarged lymph glands
and other milder unexplained illness," Gottlieb said. "That
lead us to believe that something peculiar was going on.
But if anyone back then had predicted that four case reports
in 1981 would become 40 million people infected worldwide
-- they would have been considered mad."
Gottlieb and his colleagues didn't know the cause of the
mysterious illness, but they had suspicions. "We had
an uneasy feeling that this was an infection," Gottlieb
said. "Why was this happening in gay men, patients known
to have an increased prevalence of sexually transmitted diseases?
And of course these patients had fevers. From the perspective
of an immunologist, a viral infection seemed a possibility.
But some common exposure to a toxin or to radiation had to
be considered also. At least in those first three patients,
none had a common exposure that we could establish to anything
immune suppressant. They hadn't had a common radiation, didn't
know each other, they hadn't used drugs in common that were
identified -- poppers or anything else.
"So what was it about being gay, about their sexual
preference? One of the commonalities was the high rate of
STDs. And when the first three patients were all gay men,
a possibility of sexually transmitted infection had to be
considered as a leading possibility," Gottlieb said.
On April 4, 1981, Gottlieb called the editor of the New
England Journal of Medicine to report a new epidemic. "I
can remember sitting with Randy [Shilts] in a little coffee
shop in Westwood -- it feels like yesterday -- telling him
this story," Gottlieb said. "And Randy's account
[in the book And the Band Played On] is all true. However
what Randy left out -- it might have been my fault -- but
the editor said, 'You should call the CDC. That's the way
to do it.' I frankly hadn't thought of that. What the editor
was saying was -- we're a peer review journal. We're not
a newspaper. We're not the early warning system. The MMWR
is the early warning system. And that's what you should do.
"I called this fellow [Dr. Wayne] Shandera, the CDC's
man in Los Angeles. He was the epidemic intelligence service
officer. I knew him from Stanford and I knew him personally
and I said, 'Wayne, are you aware of unusual illness going
on in gay men in L.A.?' And he said, 'No. But I'll look into
it.' He quickly found a fifth case on his own. He and I wrote
up the cases and he communicated with the editor of the MMRW
who agreed to publish our cases. Frankly, if not for the
suggestion made by the editor of the New England Journal
to call CDC and publish in MMWR, it's quite possible that
my name would never have been the first name associated with
the new disease."
That report on June 5, 1981, prompted others. On August
28, 1981, The Associated Press reported: "Two rare diseases
have struck more than 100 homosexual men in the United States
in recent months, killing almost half of them, and a medical
study group has been formed to find out why, the National
Centers for Disease Control said today."
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