Division of Virology, Department of Infectious Diseases, St. Jude Children's Research Hospital, Memphis, Tennessee, USA.
Drugs. 2010 Jul 30;70(11):1349-62. doi: 10.2165/11537960-000000000-00000.
The emergence and global spread of the 2009 pandemic H1N1 influenza virus reminds us that we are limited in the strategies available to control influenza infection. Vaccines are the best option for the prophylaxis and control of a pandemic; however, the lag time between virus identification and vaccine distribution exceeds 6 months and concerns regarding vaccine safety are a growing issue leading to vaccination refusal. In the short-term, antiviral therapy is vital to control the spread of influenza. However, we are currently limited to four licensed anti-influenza drugs: the neuraminidase inhibitors oseltamivir and zanamivir, and the M2 ion-channel inhibitors amantadine and rimantadine. The value of neuraminidase inhibitors was clearly established during the initial phases of the 2009 pandemic when vaccines were not available, i.e. stockpiles of antivirals are valuable. Unfortunately, as drug-resistant variants continue to emerge naturally and through selective pressure applied by use of antiviral drugs, the efficacy of these drugs declines. Because we cannot predict the strain of influenza virus that will cause the next epidemic or pandemic, it is important that we develop novel anti-influenza drugs with broad reactivity against all strains and subtypes, and consider moving to multiple drug therapy in the future. In this article we review the experimental data on investigational antiviral agents undergoing clinical trials (parenteral zanamivir and peramivir, long-acting neuraminidase inhibitors and the polymerase inhibitor favipiravir [T-705]) and experimental antiviral agents that target either the virus (the haemagglutinin inhibitor cyanovirin-N and thiazolides) or the host (fusion protein inhibitors [DAS181], cyclo-oxygenase-2 inhibitors and peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor agonists).
2009 年大流行性 H1N1 流感病毒的出现和全球传播提醒我们,我们在控制流感感染的策略方面存在局限性。疫苗是预防和控制大流行的最佳选择;然而,从病毒鉴定到疫苗分发之间的时间滞后超过 6 个月,并且对疫苗安全性的担忧是一个日益严重的问题,导致疫苗接种拒绝。在短期内,抗病毒疗法对于控制流感的传播至关重要。然而,我们目前仅限于四种许可的抗流感药物:神经氨酸酶抑制剂奥司他韦和扎那米韦,以及 M2 离子通道抑制剂金刚烷胺和金刚乙胺。神经氨酸酶抑制剂的价值在 2009 年大流行的初始阶段得到了明确确立,当时没有疫苗可用,即抗病毒药物的库存是有价值的。不幸的是,随着耐药变体通过使用抗病毒药物施加的选择压力自然出现和继续出现,这些药物的疗效下降。由于我们无法预测下一次流感大流行或大流行将由哪种流感病毒株引起,因此开发对所有株和亚型均具有广泛反应性的新型抗流感药物并考虑在未来采用多种药物治疗非常重要。在本文中,我们回顾了正在进行临床试验的研究性抗病毒药物的实验数据(静脉注射用扎那米韦和帕拉米韦、长效神经氨酸酶抑制剂和聚合酶抑制剂法匹拉韦[T-705])以及针对病毒(血凝素抑制剂氰钴胺-N 和噻唑烷)或宿主(融合蛋白抑制剂[DAS181]、环氧化酶-2 抑制剂和过氧化物酶体增殖物激活受体激动剂)的实验性抗病毒药物。