| Literature DB >> 25713060 |
Eric A F Simões1, John P DeVincenzo2, Michael Boeckh3, Louis Bont4, James E Crowe5, Paul Griffiths6, Frederick G Hayden7, Richard L Hodinka8, Rosalind L Smyth9, Keith Spencer10, Steffen Thirstrup11, Edward E Walsh12, Richard J Whitley13.
Abstract
Two meetings, one sponsored by the Wellcome Trust in 2012 and the other by the Global Virology Foundation in 2013, assembled academic, public health and pharmaceutical industry experts to assess the challenges and opportunities for developing antivirals for the treatment of respiratory syncytial virus (RSV) infections. The practicalities of clinical trials and establishing reliable outcome measures in different target groups were discussed in the context of the regulatory pathways that could accelerate the translation of promising compounds into licensed agents. RSV drug development is hampered by the perceptions of a relatively small and fragmented market that may discourage major pharmaceutical company investment. Conversely, the public health need is far too large for RSV to be designated an orphan or neglected disease. Recent advances in understanding RSV epidemiology, improved point-of-care diagnostics, and identification of candidate antiviral drugs argue that the major obstacles to drug development can and will be overcome. Further progress will depend on studies of disease pathogenesis and knowledge provided from controlled clinical trials of these new therapeutic agents. The use of combinations of inhibitors that have different mechanisms of action may be necessary to increase antiviral potency and reduce the risk of resistance emergence.Entities:
Keywords: patient populations; respiratory syncytial virus; therapeutic strategies
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2015 PMID: 25713060 PMCID: PMC4345819 DOI: 10.1093/infdis/jiu828
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Infect Dis ISSN: 0022-1899 Impact factor: 5.226
Studies Investigating the Relative Impact of Influenza and RSV on Hospitalization and Mortality Rates in Elderly Populations
| Overall design | Population | Location | Duration of Surveillance, y | Key Outcomes | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Regression models to associate total death counts in individuals | Healthy elderly adults | The Netherlands | 9 | Mortality rates: influenza 1.6-fold higher than for RSV | [ |
| Age-specific Poisson regression models using national viral surveillance data | Adults >65 y | United States | 22 | Mortality rates: influenza 3.7-fold higher than RSV | [ |
| HMO databases used to estimate influenza- and RSV-associated hospitalizations | Adults who did not receive influenza vaccination | United States | 3 | Hospitalization rate for influenza twice rate for RSV; RSV rates were 4-fold greater in high-risk persons aged >65 y | [ |
| Estimation of hospitalizations for RSV and influenza based on state hospital discharge databases | Approximately 40% of population | United States | 15 | Hospitalizations per 100 000 patient-years: 86 for RSV and 309 for influenza in patients aged >65 y; 12.8 for RSV and 65.6 for influenza in patients aged 50–64 y | [ |
| Diagnosis-specific study using uniplex PCR | 1471 hospitalizations | United States | 4 | Hospitalizations for RSV: 77 per 100 000 patient-years for patients | [ |
| Rates of hospitalizations for RSV and HMPV compared with influenza | 508 adults aged >50 y | United States | 3 | Hospitalization rates due to RSV, HMPV, and influenza: 15.01, 9.82, and 11.81 per 10 000 residents | [ |
| Multicenter, case-control vaccine efficacy study | 826 hospitalized patients | Spain | 1 | 102 hospitalizations (12%) for influenza, 116 (14%) for other respiratory viruses | [ |
| Retrospective cohort study | 607 adults hospitalized with RSV | Asia | 3 | All-cause mortality: 9.1% at 30 d, 11.9% at 60 d | [ |
| Smaller studies | … | Europe and Africa | 1–3 | Mean rate of hospitalization across smaller studies: 6.8% for RSV, 10.4% for influenza | [ |
Abbreviations: HMO, health maintenance organization; HMPV, metapneumovirus; PCR, polymerase chain reaction; RSV, respiratory syncytial virus.
Tests Available for Detection of RSVa
| Test | Sensitivity | Specificity | Clinical Usefulness |
|---|---|---|---|
| Virus culture systemsb | |||
| Conventional tube | Moderate | High | Reference standard for many years; slow, time-consuming, labor intensive |
| Shell vial/plate | Moderate | High | More rapid centrifugation-assisted culture; normally less sensitive than tube culture |
| Rapid antigen detection testsc | |||
| Solid-phase immunoassay | Moderate | Moderate-high | Self-contained devices; rapid and easy to use; near-patient testing enabled; sensitivity can vary by test selected |
| Immunofluorescence assay | Moderate | Moderate-high | Rapid and normally more sensitive than solid-phase immunoassays; moderately complex and subjective reading; high sensitivity in hospitalized infants |
| NAATsd | High | High | New reference standard; superior performance characteristics; expense, labor, and time compatible; commercially available and highly automatable |
| Serology | NA | NA | Not useful for diagnosis; primarily used for epidemiologic studies |
Abbreviations: NA, not applicable; NAATs, nucleic acid amplification tests; RSV, respiratory syncytial virus.
a In general, the performance of selected tests for RSV may vary depending on the type and condition of specimen collected, the prevalence of the virus in a community, the time of year when testing is performed, and the patient population examined.
b RSV is quite thermolabile and not easy to grow in culture. Cultures are most reliable in young children and less so in older children, adults, and immunocompromised hosts owing to shorter time of shedding, lower viral loads, and dry mucosa.
c Antigen tests have moderate sensitivity compared with virus culture and even less sensitivity compared with molecular methods. Like virus culture, antigen tests are more reliable in younger children. Specificity may be significantly reduced when disease prevalence is low.
d NAATs are more sensitive than any combination of culture- and/or antigen-based tests.
Agents in Development for RSV Treatmenta
| Agent | Target | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| GS-5806 | Fusion inhibitor | Oral RSV entry inhibitor |
| VP-14637 | Fusion inhibitor | … |
| JNJ-2408068 | Fusion inhibitor | … |
| MDT-637 | Fusion inhibitor | Development on hold |
| ALX-0171 | Fusion inhibitor | Nanobody technology |
| ALS-8176 | RSV polymerase | Orally bioavailable |
| T-705 (favipiravir) | Influenza polymerase | Some activity against RSV |
| RSV-604 (A-60444) | N-terminal region of nucleocapsid protein | Effective both therapeutically and prophylactically in vitro |
Abbreviation: RSV, respiratory syncytial virus.
a Source: References [133–136].
Options for Phase IIb and Phase III Clinical Studies in Different Populations
| Population | Pros | Cons | Potential End Points |
|---|---|---|---|
| Children | |||
| Outpatient | Easy to do; high prevalence (1:8–10 infants annually have RSV illness); the younger the patient, the higher likelihood of a severe outcome experience with Tamiflu/ACV in the outpatient setting; an antiviral is most likely to show an impact in this population | Large study needed, especially if more severe end points are chosen; difficult to standardize definitions; rapid diagnostics needed to identify children in the clinic; the shorter the duration of signs and symptoms, the more likely to show an impact and the more difficult to enroll patients | Prevention of LRTI, ED/urgent care visits/hospitalization, MALRTI, and acute otitis media |
| Emergency room visits | Large population; ER groups provide patient access | Disparate admission criteria (eg, to short-stay units, home oxygen use, hospital); population using ER might not represent severity of illness rather access to care; costly; multiple studies ongoing, with competition for patients | Hospitalization; duration of stay |
| Hospitalization | Captive population; most are hypoxemic; studies relatively easy to do | May be too late for an antiviral to show an impact; | Duration of hospitalization and oxygen use; economic benefit; duration of ICU stay |
| ICU | Smaller study; | Probably too late to show antiviral effect; 1 outlier can affect mean values; when to stop treatment is undefined; ICU and NICU can have different criteria for discharge | Duration of ICU stay, ventilation, total hospitalization, and oxygen use |
| Premature infants | Small populations; relatively well defined; 2-fold higher rates of severe disease; | Small population for treatment trials; many receive palivizumab (highest risk), so trials of prophylaxis will need an active control; infants of 32–35 wk gestation not seen as high-risk group in some areas of the world | Prevention of LRTI, ED/urgent care visits/hospitalization, and MALRTI |
| Congenital heart disease | Small populations; | Many receive palivizumab; surgical correction is occurring earlier and earlier, so risk is decreasing; heterogenous group: with or without pulmonary hypertension, right-to-left or left-to-right shunts, cyanotic or acyanotic | Prevention of LRTI, ED/urgent care visits/hospitalization, and |
| Adults | |||
| COPD | Population might vary from country to country; easy to do studies in these patients; | Possible RSV persistence; burden not completely established; only 2 longitudinal studies so far; low attack rates and burden; causative role in exacerbations might be difficult to establish | Prevention of MALRTI and |
| Elderly | Huge population; relatively easy to do studies in this group; placebo-controlled trials possible; | Disease not generally recognized by internists; no clear clinical syndrome (eg, bronchiolitis); overlap with influenza season; lack of a good rapid diagnostic (PCR needed for diagnosis); population-based studies in large centers might not be able to capture severe end point | Prevention of MALRTI and death |
| Immunocompromised | |||
| Children | Small populations; | Many receive palivizumab (off label); many are given toxic drugs; possible drug-drug interactions; underlying conditions may dictate course | Prevention of progression from URTI to LRTI, ED/urgent care visits/hospitalization, and death |
| Adults | Relatively large populations; high rates of severe disease; easier to perform studies; | Many receive palivizumab (off label); for prophylactic trials involve weight-based dosing, which is extremely costly; first 100 d most important (might not fall into RSV season); many receive other toxic drugs; drug-drug interactions | Prevention of progression from URTI to LRTI; |
Abbreviations: ACV, acyclovir; CHF, congestive heart failure; COPD, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease; ED, emergency department; ER, emergency room; ICU, intensive care unit; LRTI, lower respiratory tract infection; MALRTI, medically attended lower respiratory tract infection; NICU, neonatal ICU; PCR, polymerase chain reaction; RCTs, randomized controlled trials; RSV, respiratory syncytial virus; URTI, upper respiratory tract infection.
Visits to Different Healthcare Facilities for RSV Infection by Age Groupa
| Type of Visit | Visits per 1000 Children by Age Group | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 0–5 mo | 6–11 mo | 12–23 mo | 24–59 mo | |
| Hospitalization | 11.7–21.7 | 3.4–7.4 | 1.9–3.2 | 0.2–0.4 |
| ER visit | 39–69 | 45–68 | 24–38 | 11–15 |
| Practice visit | 108–157 | 160–194 | 53–80 | 31–77 |
Abbreviations: ER, emergency room; RSV, respiratory syncytial virus.
a Source: Hall et al [1].