| Literature DB >> 29143192 |
Julie Dyall1, Robin Gross2, Jason Kindrachuk3, Reed F Johnson4, Gene G Olinger5, Lisa E Hensley2, Matthew B Frieman6, Peter B Jahrling2,4.
Abstract
No specific antivirals are currently available for two emerging infectious diseases, Middle East respiratory syndrome (MERS) and severe acute respiratory syndrome (SARS). A literature search was performed covering pathogenesis, clinical features and therapeutics, clinically developed drugs for repurposing and novel drug targets. This review presents current knowledge on the epidemiology, pathogenesis and clinical features of the SARS and MERS coronaviruses. The rationale for and outcomes with treatments used for SARS and MERS is discussed. The main focus of the review is on drug development and the potential that drugs approved for other indications provide for repurposing. The drugs we discuss belong to a wide range of different drug classes, such as cancer therapeutics, antipsychotics, and antimalarials. In addition to their activity against MERS and SARS coronaviruses, many of these approved drugs have broad-spectrum potential and have already been in clinical use for treating other viral infections. A wealth of knowledge is available for these drugs. However, the information in this review is not meant to guide clinical decisions, and any therapeutic described here should only be used in context of a clinical trial. Potential targets for novel antivirals and antibodies are discussed as well as lessons learned from treatment development for other RNA viruses. The article concludes with a discussion of the gaps in our knowledge and areas for future research on emerging coronaviruses.Entities:
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Year: 2017 PMID: 29143192 PMCID: PMC5733787 DOI: 10.1007/s40265-017-0830-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Drugs ISSN: 0012-6667 Impact factor: 9.546
Fig. 1Maps of the severe acute respiratory syndrome (SARS) (a) and Middle East respiratory syndrome (MERS) (b) outbreaks with confirmed case numbers
Fig. 2Genomes of Middle East respiratory syndrome coronavirus (MERS-CoV) and severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus (SARS-CoV) indicating the open reading frames for nonstructural (1a and 1b) and structural proteins (numbered 3–9, and E, M, N, S). E envelope, M membrane, N nucleocapsid, S Spike
Drug regimens used in the treatment of SARS
| Treatment plan | Treatment outcome |
|---|---|
Ribavirin (oral/IV) Antibiotics ± corticosteroids ± immunoglobulin | No increased positive outcome with ribavirin compared to controls [ Increased risk of anemia, hypomagnesemia, hypoxia, or bradycardia with ribavirin compared to ribavirin-naive patients [ |
Ribavirin (oral/IV) Lopinavir/ritonavir ± corticosteroids | Fatality or acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS) was reduced significantly from 28.8 to 2.4% [ |
IFN-alfacon-1 ± corticosteroids ± antibiotics | Increased oxygen saturation Increased clearance of lung abnormalities Slight increase in creatinine kinase concentrations [ |
Fluoroquinolone (IV) Azithromycin (IV) IFN-α (IM) ± corticosteroids ± Immunoglobulins ± thymic peptides/proteins | No increased positive outcome [ |
Quinolone (IV) Azithromycin (IV) ± IFN-α ± corticosteroids | No increased positive outcome [ |
Levofloxacin Azithromycin ± IFN-α ± corticosteroids | Increased survival Increased clearance of lung abnormalities [ |
IFN interferon, IM intramuscular, IV intravenous, SARS severe acute respiratory syndrome
Drug regimens used in the treatment of MERS
| Treatment plan | Treatment outcome |
|---|---|
Ribavirin (oral/IV) IFN-α2b Corticosteroids | Late treatment administration. Disease progression delayed—all patients died [ |
Ribavirin (oral/IV) PEGylated IFN-α2a (IV) ± corticosteroids | Treatment initiated 0–8 days after diagnosis Adverse effects: significant decreases in hemoglobin and absolute neutrophil count (baseline count lower in treatment group) [ |
Ribavirin (oral/IV) Lopinavir/ritonavir IFN-α2b | No detectable viral RNA in serum after 2 days of therapy Adverse effects: ribavirin discontinued due to jaundice, hyperbilirubinemia Died of septic shock 2 months, 19 days after diagnosis [ |
IFN interferon, IV intravenous, MERS Middle East respiratory syndrome
Fig. 3Candidate drugs for repurposing for coronaviral infections. Several drug classes (A through I) have been studied, and the steps/processes of the viral replication cycle that they most likely target are indicated. AKT serine/threonine kinase, CAD cationic amphiphilic drug, Cyps cytochrome P-450s, E envelope, ER endoplasmic reticulum, ERGIC ER–Golgi intermediate compartment, ERK extracellular signal-reduction kinase, IFN interferon, MAPK mitogen-activated protein kinase, M membrane, MPA mycophenolic acid, mTOR mechanistic target of rapamycin, N nucleocapsid, NFAT nuclear factor of activated T cells, ORF open reading frame, PI3K phosphoinositide 3-kinase, S Spike
Clinically developed drugs with activity against MERS-CoV and SARS-CoV
| Drug class members | Activity against coronavirusesa | Activity against other viruses | Clinical status | Known safety issues | Comments |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Antidiarrheal agents | |||||
| Loperamide hydrochloride | MERS-CoV: 4.8 µM [ SARS-CoV: 5.9 µM HCoV-229E-GFP: 4 µM [ | Approved for treatment of diarrhea | Well tolerated, commonly used | WHO list of essential medicines | |
| Antimalaria agents | |||||
| Amodiaquine hydrochloride | MERS-CoV: 6.2 µM [ SARS-CoV: 1.3 µM [ | EBOV [ | Approved for treatment of malaria | Well tolerated, commonly used | |
| Chloroquine diphosphate | MERS-CoV: 3–6.3 µM [ SARS-CoV: 4.1–8.8 µM [ | In vitro: CHIKV [ In vivo: Mixed data on efficacy against EBOV in mice [ | Approved for treatment of malaria Clinical trials for treatment of CHIKV, DENV, FLUAV, and FLUBV infections showed no impact on disease [ | Well tolerated, commonly use | WHO list of essential medicines; WHO list of potential EVD treatments; dosing, formulation need to be optimized for treatment of viral infections [ |
| Hydroxychloroquine sulfate | MERS-CoV: 8.3 µM [ SARS-CoV: 8.0 µM [ | In vitro: DENV [ | Approved for treatment of malaria | Well tolerated, commonly used | WHO list of essential medicines |
| Mefloquine | MERS-CoV: 7.4 µM [ SARS-CoV: 15.6 µM [ | Approved for treatment of malaria Clinical trials for treatment of JCV infection: mixed results [ | Black box warning: potential neuropsychiatric side effects | WHO list of essential medicines | |
| Cyclophilin inhibitors | |||||
| Cyclosporin A | MERS-CoV [ SARS-CoV [ | HCV [ | Approved for immunosuppression during organ transplantation | Immunosuppression undesirable for infectious diseases | WHO list of essential medicines; non-immunosuppressive analogs are available [ |
| Interferons | |||||
| IFN-α2a | MERS-CoV: 160.8 U/mL [ | Approved for treatment of hepatitis B and C | Well tolerated | ||
| IFN-α2b | MERS-CoV: 21.4 U/mL [ SARS-CoV:6500-4950 U/mL [ | Approved for treatment of melanoma | |||
| IFN-β1a, 1b | MERS-CoV: 1.4 U/mL [ SARS-CoV: 95–105 U/mL [ | Approved for treatment of multiple sclerosis | |||
| IFN-γ | MERS-CoV: 56.5 U/mL [ SARS-CoV: 1700–2500 U/mL [ | Approved for treatment of chronic granulomatous disease | |||
| Kinase inhibitors | |||||
| Dabrafenib | MERS-CoV: 45% inhibition at 10 µM [ | Approved for treatment of cancers | Well tolerated | ||
| Dasatinib | MERS-CoV: 5.5 µM [ SARS-CoV: 2.1 µM [ | In vitro: BKPyV [ In vivo: VACV: no activity in mice [ | Approved for treatment of cancers | Well tolerated | ABL1 inhibitor, CAD Immunosuppressive effects in vivo may preclude use as anti-infective |
| Everolimus | MERS-CoV: 56% inhibition at 10 µM [ | DENV, CPXV, RSV, FLUAV [ | Approved immunosuppressant for cancer treatment and prevention of organ rejection; reduced incidence of HHV-5 in cardiac and renal transplant patients [ | Well tolerated | mTOR inhibitor [ |
| Imatinib mesylate | MERS-CoV: 17.7 µM [ SARS-CoV: 9.8 µM [ | In vitro: BKPyV [ In vivo: VACV: 100% survival in mice [ | Approved for treatment of cancers | Well tolerated | ABL1 inhibitor |
| Miltefosine | MERS-CoV: 28% at 10 µM [ | HSV-2 [ | Antimicrobial approved for treatment of leishmaniasis; investigational drug for treatment of amoeba infections | Well tolerated | Akt inhibitor WHO list of essential medicines |
| Nilotinib | MERS-CoV: 5.5 µM [ SARS-CoV: 2.1 µM [ | ||||
| Selumetinib sulfate | MERS-CoV: ≥ 95% inhibition at 10 µM [ | In Phase II/III trials for cancer treatment | Well tolerated | MEK inhibitor | |
| Sirolimus | MERS-CoV: 61% inhibition at 10 µM [ | HIV-1 [ | Approved immunosuppressant in transplant; reduced viral replication in HIV- or HCV-positive transplant patients [ | Well tolerated | mTOR inhibitor |
| Sorafenib | MERS-CoV: 93% inhibition at 10 µM [ | BKPyV [ | Approved for treatment of cancers | Well tolerated | |
| Trametinib | MERS-CoV: ≥ 95% inhibition at 0.1 µM [ | Approved for treatment of cancers | Well tolerated | ||
| Wortmannin | MERS-CoV: 40% inhibition at 10 µM [ | HSV-2 [ | In development for treatment of cancer | Toxicity issues. Derivatives are in Phase I clinical trials | |
| Neurotransmitter inhibitors | |||||
| Astemizole | MERS-CoV: 4.9 µM [ SARS-CoV: 5.6 µM [ | Previously approved antihistamine | Withdrawn in 1999 because of rare arrhythmias | ||
| Benztropine mesylate | MERS-CoV: 16.6 µM [ SARS-CoV: 21.6 µM [ | HCV [ | Approved anticholinergic for treatment of Parkinson’s disease | Well tolerated | |
| Chlorphenoxamine | MERS-CoV: 12.7 µM [ SARS-CoV: 20.0 µM [ | Approved antihistamine and anticholinergic for treatment of Parkinson’s Disease | Well tolerated | ||
| Chlorpromazine hydrochloride | MERS-CoV: 4.9–9.5 µM [ SARS-CoV: 8.8–13.0 µM [ | EBOV [ | Approved for treatment of schizophrenia | Well tolerated | CAD |
| Clomipramine hydrochloride | MERS-CoV: 9.3 µM [ | EBOV [ | Approved for treatment of depression | Well tolerated | WHO list of essential medicines |
| Fluphenazine hydrochloride | MERS-CoV: 5.9 µM [ | HCV [ | Approved for treatment of chronic psychoses | Well tolerated | WHO list of essential medicines; CAD |
| Fluspirilene | MERS-CoV: 7.5 µM [ SARS-CoV: 5.9 µM [ | Approved for treatment of schizophrenia | Well tolerated | ||
| Promethazine hydrochloride | MERS-CoV: 11.8 µM [ SARS-CoV: 7.5 µM [ | Antipsychotic approved for sedation | Well tolerated | ||
| Thiothixene | MERS-CoV: 9.3 µM [ SARS-CoV: 5.3 µM [ | Antipsychotic approved for treatment of schizophrenia | Well tolerated | ||
| Triethylperazine maleate | MERS-CoV: 7.8 µM [ | SFV [ | Approved antiemetic | Well tolerated | |
| Triflupromazine hydrochloride | MERS-CoV: 5.8 µM [ | Approved antipsychotic | Serious side effects include akathisia. | CAD | |
| Nucleic acid synthesis inhibitors | |||||
| Gemcitabine hydrochloride | MERS-CoV: 1.2 µM [ | In vitro: FLUAV [ In vivo: Mice MuLV [ | Approved for treatment of cancers | Well tolerated | WHO list of essential medicines |
| Mizoribine | SARS-CoV: 3.5-16 µg/mL [ | HCV [ | Approved immunosuppressant in organ transplantation and rheumatic diseases. | Well tolerated | |
| Mycophenolic acid | MERS-CoV: 0.17 µg/mL [ | DENV [ | Approved immunosuppressant in organ transplantation | FDA alert: risk of activation of latent herpes infections | |
| Protease inhibitors | |||||
| Lopinavir | In vitro: MERS-CoV: 8 µM [ SARS-CoV: 24.4 µM [ In vivo: 67% survival in MERS-infected NHPs [ | HIV-1 [ HPV [ | Approved for treatment of HIV infections Clinical trial for topical treatment of cervical cancer Clinical trial in SARS patients [ | Well tolerated | Lopinavir/ritonavir: WHO list of essential medicines |
| E-64-D | MERS-CoV: 1.27 µM [ | EBOV [ | Cysteine protease inhibitor Phase III for treatment of muscular dystrophy | Well tolerated | |
| K1177 | MERS-CoV, SARS-CoV, HCoV-229E (VLP) [ | EBOV, MARV, NiV (VLP) [ | Cysteine protease inhibitor In clinical development for treatment of Chagas disease | Well tolerated | |
| Camostat mesylate | In vitro: MERS-CoV [ In vivo: SARS: activity in mice [ | In vitro: FLUAV, FLUBV [ | Cellular serine protease inhibitor In clinical development for chronic pancreatitis | Well tolerated | SARS-CoV spread is driven by serine protease rather than cysteine protease [ |
| Protein synthesis inhibitors | |||||
| Anisomycin | MERS-CoV: 0.003 µM [ SARS-CoV: 0.19 µM [ | PV [ | Antibiotic in clinical development for treatment of amoebiasis | ||
| Emetine hydrochloride | MERS-CoV: 0.014 µM [ SARS-CoV: 0.05 µM [ | FLUAV [ | Approved antibiotic for treatment of amoebiasis in some countries | Side effects include nausea; derivatives with less side effects available | |
| Omacetaxine mepesuccinate | MERS-CoV: 9.07 µM [ MHV: 0.012 µM [ | HBV [ | Approved for chronic myeloid leukemia | Well tolerated | |
| Selective estrogen response modulator | |||||
| Tamoxifen citrate | MERS-CoV: 10.1 µM [ | HCV [ | Approved for treatment of breast cancer | Black box warning: uterine cancer, blood clots, stroke | WHO list of essential medicines; CAD |
| Toremifene citrate | MERS-CoV: 12.9 µM; SARS-CoV: 12 µM [ | In vitro: HCV [ In vivo: EBOV: 50% survival in mice [ | Approved for treatment of breast cancer. | Black box warning: cardiac effect (QT prolongation) in patients with hypokalemia | WHO list of potential EVD treatments; CAD |
| Sterol metabolism inhibitors | |||||
| Terconazole | MERS-CoV: 12.2 µM [ | EBOV-VLP [ | Approved topical antifungal for treatment of vaginal yeast infections | Would require IND for oral use | CAD |
| Triparanol | MERS-CoV 5.3 µM [ | EBOV-VLP [ | Developed for lowering serum cholesterol; withdrawn | Acute cataract formation | CAD |
ABL1 abelson murine leukemia viral oncogene homolog 1, Akt protein kinase B, BKPyV BK polyomavirus, BVDV Bovine viral diarrhea virus, CAD cationic amphiphilic drug, CHIK Chikungunya virus, CPXV Cowpox virus, CVs Coxsackie viruses, DENV-1 Dengue virus-1, DENV-2 Dengue virus-2, EBOV Ebola virus, EC effective concentration 50, EMCV Encephalomyocarditis virus, EV71 Enterovirus 71, FCoV Feline coronavirus, FDA Food and Drug Administration, FLUAV Influenza A virus, FLUBV Influenza B virus, HBV Hepatitis B virus, HCV hepatitis C virus, HeV Hendra virus, HHV-1 Human herpesvirus-1 (herpes simplex virus-1), HHV-2 human herpresvirus-2 (herpes simplex virus-2), HHV-5 Human herpesvirus-5 (cytomegalovirus), HIV-1 Human immunodeficiency virus-1, HIV-2 Human immunodeficiency virus-2, HPV Human papilloma virus, HRVs Human rhinoviruses, IND Investigational new drug, JCV John Cunningham virus, JUNV Junin virus, MARV Marburg virus, MEK MAPK/ERK kinase, MERS-CoV Middle East respiratory syndrome coronavirus, MHV Mouse hepatitis virus, MPXV Monkeypox virus, mTOR mechanistic target of rapamycin, MuLV Murine leukemia virus, NiV Nipah virus, PV Poliovirus, RAVV Ravn virus; RSV Respiratory syncytial virus, RVFV Rift Valley fever virus, SARS-CoV Severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus, SFV Semliki forest virus, SFTSV Severe fever with thrombocytopenia syndrome virus, SINV Sindbis virus, SUDV Sudan virus, SV40 Simian virus 40; VACV Vaccinia virus, VARV Variola virus, VLP virus-like particles, WHO World Health Organization
aAntiviral activity is expressed in terms of EC50 unless otherwise noted
Drugs in development for the treatment of Middle East respiratory syndrome (MERS) or severe acute respiratory syndrome (SARS)
| Viral/cellular target | Drug class | Drug |
|---|---|---|
| MERS-CoV | ||
| 3C-like protease | Benzotriazole esters | CE-5 [ |
| Papain-like protease | Thiopurines | 6-Thioguanine, 6-mercaptopurine [ |
| Helicase | Triazole | SSYA10-001 [ |
| RNA-dependent RNA polymerase | Nucleotide prodrug | GS-5734 [ |
| RNA-dependent RNA polymerase | Nucleoside analog | BCX4430 [ |
| Membrane-bound RNA synthesis | Small molecule inhibitor | K22 [ |
| Furin inhibitor | Small molecule inhibitor | Decanoyl-RVKR [ |
| SARS-CoV | ||
| 3C-like protease | Benzotriazole esters | CE-5 [ |
| 3C-like protease | Anilides | Peptide nitroanilides [ |
| 3C-like protease | C2-symmetric inhibitors containing diol cores | TL-3 [ |
| 3C-like protease | Pyrazole analogs | Pyrazolones [ |
| 3C-like protease | Serine inhibitor | Trifluoromethyl ketones [ |
| 3C-like protease | Serotonin receptor antagonist | Cinanserin [ |
| 3C-like protease | Zinc-conjugated inhibitor | JMF 1586 [ |
| Papain-like protease | Thiopurines | 6-Thioguanine, 6-mercaptopurine [ |
| Helicase | Triazole | SSYA10-001 [ |
| Helicase | Bananin derivatives | Vanillinbananin, Idobananin [ |
| NTPase/Helicase | Aryl diketoacids Dihydroxychromone and hydroxychromone derivatives | ADK analogs [ |
| RNA-dependent RNA polymerase | Nucleoside analogs | BCX4430 [ |
| Cathepsin L cellular protease | Small molecule inhibitor | Oxocarbazate [ |
| ACE2–SARS–S1 complex | Small molecule inhibitor | SSAA09E2 [ |
| S2-cell membrane fusion | Small molecule inhibitor | SSAA09E3 [ |
| ACE2–SARS–S1 complex | Small molecule inhibitor | NAAE [ |
ACE2 angiotensin converting enzyme, MERS-CoV Middle East respiratory syndrome coronavirus, S1 spike protein 1 domain, S2 Spike protein 2 domain
| The outbreaks of Middle East respiratory syndrome (MERS) and severe acute respiratory syndrome (SARS) were caused by emerging coronaviruses. |
| A variety of approaches for developing therapeutics are discussed with emphasis on drugs that have been approved for other indications and could be repurposed for treating emerging coronaviral infections. |
| The recent MERS and SARS outbreaks highlight the importance of a panel of well-characterized broad-spectrum antivirals for treating emerging viral infections |