“There’s always a little bit of
tension around
these issues of, well, is the drug
going
to work, or not.”
Dr. Robert Shafer, Stanford
infectious disease specialist
Good news
from a phase 2 investigation pitting Molnupiravir (an oral antiviral agent
still in clinical trials) against SARS-CoV-2.
After years of testing this-a-vir and that-a-vir in various
labs, Molnupiravir and Remdesivir proved most likely to succeed. Here’s the background story followed by the
test results.
RNA viruses
rely on their RNA-dependent polymerase (RdRP)* to stitch together viral messenger RNA. The sequenced mRNA in turn produces various
proteins used for the production of new virions as the invading virus overtakes
host cells. What’s needed for halting viral reproduction is a reliable RdRp
inhibitor. Many those-a-virs created in labs have been tested against
SARS-CoV-2. A successful compound will plop itself into the developing viral
sequence causing mutations in the proteins and…hurray! no new offspring
created. Remdesivir showed strong inhibition in lab and animal trials, and was
subsequently approved for treatment in patients. Unfortunately, while it works
well in toning down the severity of the illness thus speeding recovery, it requires
IV infusion in a hospital setting and doesn’t reduce deaths in difficult cases.
There are
currently 246 antivirals in development. Creating antiviral meds is rather
tricky, the difficulty being how to stop propagation of more virions produced
within the host cell without killing the cell itself. Merck’s Molnupiravir,
originally developed by Emory University then bought by Ridgeback Bio that sold
it to Merck, originally targeted Influenza for Phase 1 animal trials. The drug proved to be
effective at curbing flu infections in mice, guinea pigs, ferrets and
human-airway organoids (human cells grown in petri dishes into viable tissues)..
But then
along came March, 2020 and the onset of SARS-CoV-2 which completely changed their
plans. A successful test with ferrets proved that Molnupiravir blocked both
developing cases as well as ferret to ferret transition. They went on to a
Phase 2 safety trial with 202 outpatients with early symptoms of SARS-CoV-2.
Those who received 400 or 800 mg. daily were completely free of virus by Day 5.
Only 11.1% of the placebo group had similar clearance. Phase 2/3 testing is
underway with results expected in September.
Here’s hoping!!
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