Cidofovir derivative shows promise as oral drug for smallpox
Mar 26, 2002 (CIDRAP News) – A new, orally
administered derivative of the antiviral drug cidofovir blocks the action of
smallpox virus in laboratory tissue-culture cells and protects mice from the
effects of cowpox virus, according to studies presented at a conference last
week. Researchers say the results suggest that the drug may be an effective
treatment for smallpox.
The new drug, called hexadecyloxypropyl-cidofovir (HDP-CDV),
was 100 times more effective than cidofovir in slowing smallpox replication in human
tissue culture, according to a news release from the University of California,
San Diego (UCSD), where the compound was developed. In addition, the drug
protected mice infected with a lethal dose of cowpox virus, a close relative of
smallpox virus. The findings were presented Mar 20 at the 15th International
Conference on Antiviral Research in Prague, Czech Republic.
The only proven protective measure against smallpox is
vaccination. Cidofovir, an inhibitor of viral DNA polymerase, is currently used
to treat retinal infections caused by cytomegalovirus. In a federal program to
find a drug for smallpox, cidofovir was previously found to be effective against
smallpox and related viruses in laboratory and animal studies, according to the
UCSD statement. However, the drug must be given intravenously, which would
limit its usefulness in dealing with a smallpox epidemic.
"Cidofovir's drawback is poor oral availability,"
said Karl Y. Hostetler, MD, UCSD professor of medicine and director of the Endocrine
and Metabolism Clinic at the Veterans Affairs San Diego Healthcare System (VASDHS).
"It can only be given intravenously. If you've got thousands of people
exposed to smallpox, a drug that needs to be injected would be difficult to use
widely." HDP-CDV was developed by Hostetler and James Beadle, PhD, a research
professor at UCSD and VASDHS.
If further studies support the safety and effectiveness of
HDP-CDV, it could be given in pill or capsule form for 5 to 14 days to prevent
and treat smallpox in people exposed to the virus, Hostetler said. The drug
must be tested further in animals and undergo safety trials in healthy people, the
UCSD statement said.
Hostetler and Beadle have studied HDP-CDV in collaboration
with groups headed by John Huggins, PhD, at the US Army Research Institute of
Infectious Diseases at Fort Detrick, Md., and Earl Kern, PhD, at the University
of Alabama, Birmingham. At the conference, Huggins's group presented data on
the performance of the drug in tissue culture and in mice, according to UCSD
officials.
In one tissue-culture study, HDP-CDV produced the same
effect against smallpox, monkeypox, cowpox, and vaccinia as unmodified
cidofovir did, even though the HDP-CDV was given at 100- to 1,000-fold lower
concentrations, according to an abstract supplied by UCSD.
In another study, mice were infected with a normally lethal
dose of cowpox virus, and forced feeding of an HDP-CDV solution was begun the
same day, according to an abstract. Several groups of 10 mice were treated with
varying dosages of the drug for 5 days. At the lowest dose, 0.63 mg/kg/day,
half of the mice survived, and all mice treated with 5 or 10 mg/kg/day
survived. Among mice treated orally with 10 or 20 mg/kg/day of unmodified cidofovir,
9 out of 10 died. To test for drug toxicity, uninfected mice also were treated
with various dosages of HDP-CDV, and all survived.
The Huggins group also found that virus in the lungs of
infected animals dropped to nearly undetectable levels after oral
administration of HDP-CDV, but not after intravenous treatment with comparable
levels of cidofovir, according to the UCSD statement.
In other research presented at the conference, Kern's group
found HDP-CDV to be active in tissue cultures against infections caused by
cytomegalovirus, herpes virus, varicella zoster virus, and Epstein-Barr virus,
UCSD officials said.
UCSD officials said Hostetler's research was supported by
grants from the Department of Defense, the National Institute on Allergy and
Infectious Diseases, the National Eye Institute, and VASDHS.
See also:
UCSD news release describing the findings
http://ucsdnews.ucsd.edu/newsrel/health/smallpox.htm