| Literature DB >> 26316715 |
Eric Chatelain1, Nandini Konar2.
Abstract
Chagas disease, or American trypanosomiasis, caused by Trypanosoma cruzi parasite infection is endemic in Latin America and presents an increasing clinical challenge due to migrating populations. Despite being first identified over a century ago, only two drugs are available for its treatment, and recent outcomes from the first clinical trials in 40 years were lackluster. There is a critical need to develop new drugs to treat Chagas disease. This requires a better understanding of the progression of parasite infection, and standardization of animal models designed for Chagas disease drug discovery. Such measures would improve comparison of generated data and the predictability of test hypotheses and models designed for translation to human disease. Existing animal models address both disease pathology and treatment efficacy. Available models have limited predictive value for the preclinical evaluation of novel therapies and need to more confidently predict the efficacy of new drug candidates in clinical trials. This review highlights the overall lack of standardized methodology and assessment tools, which has hampered the development of efficacious compounds to treat Chagas disease. We provide an overview of animal models for Chagas disease, and propose steps that could be undertaken to reduce variability and improve predictability of drug candidate efficacy. New technological developments and tools may contribute to a much needed boost in the drug discovery process.Entities:
Keywords: Trypanosoma cruzi; drug discovery; efficacy prediction; in vivo models; translation
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2015 PMID: 26316715 PMCID: PMC4548737 DOI: 10.2147/DDDT.S90208
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Drug Des Devel Ther ISSN: 1177-8881 Impact factor: 4.162
Figure 1Chagas disease progression.
Notes: Trypanosoma cruzi infection consists of an acute disease phase characterized by elevated parasite load (green). Immune response brings parasite load down to low/undetectable levels. Chagas disease then progresses to the chronic phase, the severity of which (blue) depends on time since infection and host immune status or genetic background. In all, 30%–40% of Chagas patients in the chronic phase will develop clinical manifestations such as cardiomyopathy or megacolon; the remaining 60%–70% will stay asymptomatic (indeterminate form of the disease). Adapted from Tarleton RL. Trypanosoma cruzi and Chagas disease: cause and effect. In: Tyler KM, Miles MA, editors. American Trypanosomiasis. New York; Springer; 2003:107–116. With kind permission from Springer Science and Business Media.124
Abbreviations: m, month; y, year.
Comparative efficacy of posaconazole (20 mg/kg) and benznidazole (100 mg/kg) against Trypanosoma cruzi infection in selected mouse models following oral administration
| Mouse strain/sex | Treatment start, day pi | Treatment duration, days | Cure assessment method | Cure posa-conazole (%) | Cure BZN (%) | Reference | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Swiss/F | CL | 4 | 20 | Hemoculture, xenodiagnosis and flow cytometry for anti-live | 100 | 100 | |
| Y | 89 | 44 | |||||
| Colombiana | 50 | 0 | |||||
| Swiss/F | CL | 12–15 | 20 | Hemoculture, xenodiagnosis and flow cytometry for anti-live trypomastigote antibodies | – | 100 | |
| Y | 8–10 | – | 31 | ||||
| Colombiana | 12–15 | – | 0 | ||||
| C57Bl/6/M | Y | 4 | 20 | Hemoculture | 89 (bid) | 86 | |
| Balb/c/F | Tulahuen | 10 | 10/20 | qPCR of blood samples following immunosuppression | 0/– | 0/100 | |
| Y | 5 | 50/– | 0/14.3 | ||||
| Swiss/F | Tulahuen | 8 | 20 | PCR of blood and selected tissues (heart, spleen, skeletal muscle, and colon) following immunosuppression | 20 | 0 | |
| Swiss/F | Y | 4 | 10/20 | PCR of blood following immunossuppression | 0/80 | 0/70 | |
| VL-10 | 7 | 20 | 0 | 0 | |||
| C57Bl/6/NS | CL | 15 | 40 | Hemoculture and qPCR in skeletal muscle following immunosuppression | 90 | 100 | |
| Colombiana | 15 | 40/60 | – | 55/66 | |||
| Swiss/F | Y | 4 | 20 | Hemoculture | 100 | 50 | |
| NMRI/F | Y | 1 | 28+15 | Hemoculture, hemoinoculation of baby mice, xenodiagnosis, and serological tests (anti- | 75 | – | |
| Swiss/M | TcI, TcII and TcIV (23 strains) | 5 | 20 | Fresh blood examination, hemoculture, PCR, and ELISA | – | 60.5 (27.3–100) | |
| Balb/c/F | CL Brener | 14 | 20 | In vivo bioluminescence (BLI) and ex vivo BLI in organs; qPCR confirmation | 16 | 100 | |
| Swiss/F | CL | 120 | 20 | As above | 57 | 0 | |
| Y | 50 | 0 | |||||
| Colombiana | 50 | 0 | |||||
| Balb/c/F | Tulahuen | 60 | 5/10 | As above | 0/– | 0/100 | |
| Y | 0/– | 0/12.5 | |||||
| C57Bl/6/NS | Colombiana | 120 | 40 | As above | 0 | ||
| NMRI/F | Bertoldo | 52 | 28+15 | As above | 50 (15 mg/kg) | ||
| Swiss/F | CL | 120 | 20 | Hemoculture, xenodiagnosis and flow cytometry for anti-live | – | 27 | |
| Y | – | 18 | |||||
| Colombiana | – | 0 | |||||
| Balb/c/F | CL Brener | 74 | 20 | As above | 0 | 100 |
Notes: The data shows the mean % cure across the different T. cruzi strains; data in brackets is the range of % cure obtained and shows the variability across strains. The “–” represents no data.
Abbreviations: F, female; M, male; bid, twice a day; BZN, benznidazole; ELISA, enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay; NS, not specified; PCR, polymerase chain reaction; pi, post-infection; qPCR, quantitative PCR.
Selected unanswered questions in Chagas disease
| • In the context of the Critical Path Initiative, what is the most appropriate animal model (i) for translation into humans (ii) for the drug discovery process? |
| • How could the variability observed in the different models be minimized? |
| • Could the efficacy of a compound in a validated acute model be successfully applied to a chronic model of disease? |
| • Is natural infection in an appropriate animal a better model than experimental infection in the same species? |
| • Are chronic disease models involving |
| • Could in vitro evaluation of compound efficacy against a panel of representative parasite strains be a surrogate for in vivo testing in animal models with the same strains (especially if the compound has appropriate DMPK properties)? |
| • What route of infection should be used in animal models? |
| • Is tissue tropism during the chronic stage of disease important, considering the dynamic nature of the infection? |
| • Which parameters should be considered important from a predictable animal model standpoint? |
| • What is the importance of timing of treatment initiation, dosing regimen, and treatment duration? |
| • How would one define cure in a model of choice? |
| • What should be the readout of choice for cure? |
| • What are the best comparative compounds or controls that should be used in the selected animal model to validate test compounds and translate to man? |
Abbreviations: BZN, benznidazole; DMPK, drug metabolism and pharmacokinetic.
Some factors related to variability in experimental conditions in in vivo models
| • Type of animal host (lineage, breeding methodology, age, weight, sex, genetic susceptibility). The most common mouse strains include outbred strains such as Swiss, CD-1 and inbred strains such as A/J, Balb/C, C57BL/6, and C3H. Models may also use various null and transgenic mice |
| • Type of parasite (strain, life cycle stage, potency and source, eg, isolates, laboratory strains, fecal metacyclics of triatomine insects). |
| • Different host–parasite combinations (depending on the immune background of the host) |
| • In vitro culture conditions of the laboratory-grown parasite strain |
| • Handling procedures |
| • Route of parasite inoculation and size of inoculum |
| • Relationship between drug exposure and cure |
| • Route of drug administration, incubation period before drug treatment |
| • Drug formulation (different pharmacokinetics) |
| • Treatment dose, duration, and initiation |
| • Immunosuppression schedule |
| • Definitions of cure criteria and disease stage |
| • Readout methods to assess infection and cure (parasitemia, PCR, imaging, histopathology,…) |
Abbreviation: PCR, polymerase chain reaction.
Some perceived advantages and disadvantages of Chagas disease in vivo models for translation
| Animal | Pros | Cons |
|---|---|---|
| Mouse, rat, hamster, guinea pig, and rabbit | – Imitates aspects of human Chagas disease pathogenesis (immunological, pathological, and physiological) | – Some acute infection models do not reflect human disease, as acute infection is fatal in up to 5% of cases in humans |
| – Acute model can provide quick results Compared with larger animals: | – Different pathologies are observed in humans | |
| – Practical; ease of handling and keeping | – Lack of correlation between parasitemia and severity of pathological manifestations | |
| – Lower cost; allows for greater sample numbers | ||
| – Small body weight requires smaller drug quantities, which may be available in limited amounts during the discovery phase | – In the context of drug testing in chronic models, experiments are time consuming and expensive; not necessarily compatible with lead optimization iterative process | |
| Chicken | – Model might help explain the pathogenesis of Chagas disease (autoimmune processes) | – Not “suitable” for the lead optimization process (assessment of trypanocidal effect of compounds) |
| – kDNA mutated chickens display inflammatory cardiomyopathy similar to that seen in human Chagas disease | ||
| Dog | – Considered a good model to study the pathogenesis of | – Ethical and cost considerations |
| – Reproduces the clinical and immunological findings described in chagasic patients | ||
| Non-human primate | – Could contribute to the development of therapies for the disease in humans | – No infected capuchin monkeys display ECGs abnormalities and few show chronic myocarditis: not susceptible to disease development |
| – ECG changes in infected monkeys were correlated with specific anatomic lesions | – Seropositive baboons display chagasic heart disease but do not show differences in coronary microcirculation pattern | |
| – Ethical and cost considerations |
Abbreviations: ECG, electrocardiography; kDNA, kinetoplast DNA.
Target product profile (2010)
| Acceptable | Ideal | |
|---|---|---|
| Target population | Chronic | Chronic and acute (reactivations) |
| Strains | TcI, TcII, TcV, and TcVI | All |
| Distribution | All areas | All areas |
| Adult/children | Adult | All |
| Clinical efficacy | Non-inferior to benznidazole in all endemic regions (parasitological) | Superiority to benznidazole to different phases of disease (acute and chronic) (parasitological) |
| Safety | Superiority to benznidazole | Superiority to benznidazole |
| Three CE plus two standard LE or ECG during treatment | No CE or LE or ECG needed during treatment | |
| Activity against resistant strains | Not necessary | Active against nitrofuran- and nitroimidazole-resistant |
| Contraindications | Pregnancy/lactation | None |
| Precautions | No genotoxicity; no significant pro-arrythmic potential | No genotoxicity; no teratogenicity; no negative inotropic effect; significant proarrythmic potential |
| Interactions | No clinically significant interaction with anti-hypertensive, anti-arrythmic and anticoagulants drugs | None |
| Presentation | Oral | Oral |
| Stability | 3 years, climatic zone IV | 5 years, climatic zone IV |
| Dosing regimen | Comparable to systemic antifungal treatments | Once daily/30days |
Abbreviations: CE, clinical event; ECG, electrocardiography; LE, laboratory event.