1 research outputs found
NPP-669, a Novel Broad-Spectrum Antiviral Therapeutic with Excellent Cellular Uptake, Antiviral Potency, Oral Bioavailability, Preclinical Efficacy, and a Promising Safety Margin
DNA viruses are responsible for many diseases in humans.
Current
treatments are often limited by toxicity, as in the case of cidofovir
(CDV, Vistide), a compound used against cytomegalovirus (CMV) and
adenovirus (AdV) infections. CDV is a polar molecule with poor bioavailability,
and its overall clinical utility is limited by the high occurrence
of acute nephrotoxicity. To circumvent these disadvantages, we designed
nine CDV prodrug analogues. The prodrugs modulate the polarity of
CDV with a long sulfonyl alkyl chain attached to one of the phosphono
oxygens. We added capping groups to the end of the alkyl chain to
minimize β-oxidation and focus the metabolism on the phosphoester
hydrolysis, thereby tuning the rate of this reaction by altering the
alkyl chain length. With these modifications, the prodrugs have excellent
aqueous solubility, optimized metabolic stability, increased cellular
permeability, and rapid intracellular conversion to the pharmacologically
active diphosphate form (CDV-PP). The prodrugs exhibited significantly
enhanced antiviral potency against a wide range of DNA viruses in
infected human foreskin fibroblasts. Single-dose intravenous and oral
pharmacokinetic experiments showed that the compounds maintained plasma
and target tissue levels of CDV well above the EC50 for
24 h. These experiments identified a novel lead candidate, NPP-669.
NPP-669 demonstrated efficacy against CMV infections in mice and AdV
infections in hamsters following oral (p.o.) dosing at a dose of 1
mg/kg BID and 0.1 mg/kg QD, respectively. We further showed that NPP-669
at 30 mg/kg QD did not exhibit histological signs of toxicity in mice
or hamsters. These data suggest that NPP-669 is a promising lead candidate
for a broad-spectrum antiviral compound