| Literature DB >> 28780425 |
Brian B Gowen1, Jonna B Westover2, Eric J Sefing2, Arnaud J Van Wettere3, Kevin W Bailey2, Luci Wandersee2, Takashi Komeno4, Yousuke Furuta4.
Abstract
A collection of Old and New World arenaviruses are etiologic agents of viral hemorrhagic fever, a syndrome that features hematologic abnormalities, vascular leak, hypovolemia, and multi-organ failure. Treatment is limited to ribavirin for Lassa fever and immune plasma for Argentine hemorrhagic fever. Improved therapeutic options that are safe, more effective and widely available are needed. Here, we show that modification of favipiravir treatment to include a high-dose loading period achieves complete protection in a guinea pig model of Argentine hemorrhagic fever when treatment was initiated two days following challenge with Junin virus (JUNV). This loading dose strategy also protected 50% of animals from lethal disease when treatment was delayed until 5 days post-infection and extended the survival time in those that succumbed. Consistent with the survival data, dramatic reductions in serum and tissue virus loads were observed in animals treated with favipiravir. This is the first report demonstrating complete protection against uniformly lethal JUNV infection in guinea pigs by administration of a small molecule antiviral drug.Entities:
Keywords: Arenavirus; Favipiravir; Junin virus; T-705; Viral hemorrhagic fever
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Year: 2017 PMID: 28780425 PMCID: PMC5580092 DOI: 10.1016/j.antiviral.2017.07.019
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Antiviral Res ISSN: 0166-3542 Impact factor: 5.970