Phan Tin, Ribeiro Ruy M, Edelstein Gregory E, Boucau Julie, Uddin Rockib, Marino Caitlin, Liew May Y, Barry Mamadou, Choudhary Manish C, Tien Dessie, Su Karry, Reynolds Zahra, Li Yijia, Sagar Shruti, Vyas Tammy D, Kawano Yumeko, Sparks Jeffrey A, Hammond Sarah P, Wallace Zachary, Vyas Jatin M, Li Jonathan Z, Siedner Mark J, Barczak Amy K, Lemieux Jacob E, Perelson Alan S
Theoretical Biology and Biophysics Group, Los Alamos National Laboratory, Los Alamos, NM 87544, USA.
Department of Medicine, Brigham and Women's Hospital, Harvard Medical School, Boston, MA 02115, USA.
bioRxiv. 2024 Sep 16:2024.09.13.613000. doi: 10.1101/2024.09.13.613000.
In a subset of SARS-CoV-2 infected individuals treated with the oral antiviral nirmatrelvir-ritonavir, the virus rebounds following treatment. The mechanisms driving this rebound are not well understood. We used a mathematical model to describe the longitudinal viral load dynamics of 51 individuals treated with nirmatrelvir-ritonavir, 20 of whom rebounded. Target cell preservation, either by a robust innate immune response or initiation of nirmatrelvir-ritonavir near the time of symptom onset, coupled with incomplete viral clearance, appear to be the main factors leading to viral rebound. Moreover, the occurrence of viral rebound is likely influenced by time of treatment initiation relative to the progression of the infection, with earlier treatments leading to a higher chance of rebound. Finally, our model demonstrates that extending the course of nirmatrelvir-ritonavir treatment, in particular to a 10-day regimen, may greatly diminish the risk for rebound in people with mild-to-moderate COVID-19 and who are at high risk of progression to severe disease. Altogether, our results suggest that in some individuals, a standard 5-day course of nirmatrelvir-ritonavir starting around the time of symptom onset may not completely eliminate the virus. Thus, after treatment ends, the virus can rebound if an effective adaptive immune response has not fully developed. These findings on the role of target cell preservation and incomplete viral clearance also offer a possible explanation for viral rebounds following other antiviral treatments for SARS-CoV-2.
在接受口服抗病毒药物奈玛特韦-利托那韦治疗的一部分新冠病毒感染者中,病毒在治疗后出现反弹。导致这种反弹的机制尚不完全清楚。我们使用数学模型来描述51名接受奈玛特韦-利托那韦治疗的患者的纵向病毒载量动态变化,其中20人出现了病毒反弹。通过强大的先天免疫反应或在症状出现时附近开始使用奈玛特韦-利托那韦来保存靶细胞,再加上病毒清除不完全,似乎是导致病毒反弹的主要因素。此外,病毒反弹的发生可能受治疗开始时间相对于感染进展的影响,早期治疗导致反弹的可能性更高。最后,我们的模型表明,延长奈玛特韦-利托那韦的治疗疗程,特别是延长至10天的治疗方案,可能会大大降低轻症至中症新冠患者且有进展为重症高风险人群的病毒反弹风险。总体而言,我们的结果表明,在一些个体中,在症状出现时左右开始的标准5天奈玛特韦-利托那韦疗程可能无法完全清除病毒。因此,如果有效的适应性免疫反应尚未充分发展,治疗结束后病毒可能会反弹。这些关于靶细胞保存和病毒清除不完全作用的发现,也为新冠病毒其他抗病毒治疗后的病毒反弹提供了一种可能的解释。