Kleymann Gerald
Expert Opin Investig Drugs. 2003 Feb;12(2):165-83. doi: 10.1517/13543784.12.2.165.
The quiet pandemic of herpes simplex virus (HSV) infection has plagued humanity since ancient times, causing mucocutaneous infection, such as herpes labialis and herpes genitalis. Disease symptoms often interfere with everyday activities and occasionally HSV infections are the cause of life-threatening or sight-impairing disease, especially in neonates and the immunocompromised patient population. After primary or initial infection the virus persists for life in a latent form in neurons of the host, periodically reactivating and often resulting in significant psychosocial distress for the patient. Currently, no cure is available. In the mid-1950s the first antiviral, idoxuridine, was developed for topical treatment of herpes disease and, in 1978, vidarabine was licensed for systemic use to treat HSV encephalitis. Acyclovir (Zovirax), a potent, specific and tolerable nucleosidic inhibitor of the herpes DNA polymerase, was a milestone in the development of antiviral drugs in the late 1970s. In the mid-1990s, when acyclovir became a generic drug, valacyclovir (Valtrex) and famciclovir (Famvir), prodrugs of the gold standard and penciclovir (Denavir), Vectavir), a close analogue, were launched. Though numerous approaches and strategies were tested and considerable effort was expended in the search of the next generation of an antiherpetic therapy, it proved difficult to outperform acyclovir. Notable in this regard was the award of a Nobel Prize in 1988 for the elucidation of mechanistic principles which resulted in the development of new drugs such as acyclovir. Vaccines, interleukins, interferons, therapeutic proteins, antibodies, immunomodulators and small-molecule drugs with specific or nonspecific modes of action lacked either efficacy or the required safety profile to replace the nucleosidic drugs acyclovir, valacyclovir, penciclovir and famciclovir as the first choice of treatment. Recently though, new inhibitors of the HSV helicase-primase with potent in vitro antiherpes activity, novel mechanisms of action, low resistance rates and superior efficacy against HSV in animal models have been discovered. This review summarises the current therapeutic options, discusses the potential of preclinical or investigational drugs and provides an up-to-date interpretation of the challenge to establish novel treatments for herpes simplex disease.
单纯疱疹病毒(HSV)感染这一悄然肆虐的流行病自古以来就一直困扰着人类,引发黏膜皮肤感染,如唇疱疹和生殖器疱疹。疾病症状常常干扰日常活动,HSV感染偶尔还会导致危及生命或损害视力的疾病,尤其是在新生儿和免疫功能低下的患者群体中。初次或初始感染后,病毒以潜伏形式在宿主神经元中终身存在,周期性地重新激活,常常给患者带来严重的心理社会困扰。目前,尚无治愈方法。20世纪50年代中期,第一种抗病毒药物碘苷被开发用于局部治疗疱疹疾病,1978年,阿糖腺苷被批准用于全身治疗HSV脑炎。阿昔洛韦(无环鸟苷)是一种强效、特异且耐受性良好的疱疹DNA聚合酶核苷抑制剂,是20世纪70年代末抗病毒药物研发的一个里程碑。20世纪90年代中期,阿昔洛韦成为非专利药时,伐昔洛韦(万乃洛韦)和泛昔洛韦(泛维尔)这两种金标准药物的前体药物以及喷昔洛韦(喷昔洛韦乳膏)(德纳韦)(威克塔韦)这种密切类似物被推出。尽管测试了众多方法和策略,并且在寻找下一代抗疱疹疗法方面付出了巨大努力,但事实证明很难超越阿昔洛韦。在这方面值得注意的是,1988年因阐明导致开发阿昔洛韦等新药的作用机制原理而授予了诺贝尔奖。疫苗、白细胞介素、干扰素、治疗性蛋白质、抗体、免疫调节剂以及具有特异性或非特异性作用方式的小分子药物,要么缺乏疗效,要么缺乏所需的安全性,无法取代核苷类药物阿昔洛韦、伐昔洛韦、喷昔洛韦和泛昔洛韦成为首选治疗药物。不过,最近发现了具有强大体外抗疱疹活性、新颖作用机制、低耐药率且在动物模型中对HSV疗效更佳的HSV解旋酶-引发酶新抑制剂。本综述总结了当前的治疗选择,讨论了临床前或研究性药物的潜力,并对为单纯疱疹疾病建立新治疗方法所面临的挑战提供了最新解读。