Zanamivir is a highly selective neuraminidase (NA) inhibitor with
demonstrated clinical efficacy against influenza A and B virus infections.
In phase II clinical efficacy trials (NAIB2005 and NAIB2008), virological
substudies showed mean reductions in virus shedding after 24 h of
treatment of 1.5 to 2.0 log(10) 50% tissue culture infective doses
compared to a placebo, with no reemergence of virus after the completion
of therapy. Paired isolates (n = 41) obtained before and during therapy
with zanamivir demonstrated no shifts in susceptibility to zanamivir when
measured by NA assays, although for a few isolates NA activity was too low
to evaluate. In plaque reduction assays in MDCK cells, the susceptibility
of isolates to zanamivir was extremely variable even at baseline and did
not correlate with the speed of resolution of virus shedding. Isolates
with apparent limited susceptibility to zanamivir by plaque reduction
proved highly susceptible in vivo in the ferret model. Further sequence
analysis of paired isolates revealed no changes in the hemagglutinin and
NA genes in the majority of isolates. The few changes observed were all
natural variants. No amino acid changes that had previously been
identified in vitro as being involved with reduced susceptibility to
zanamivir were observed. These studies highlighted problems associated
with monitoring susceptibility to NA inhibitors in the clinic, in that no
reliable cell-based assay is available. At present the NA assay is the
best available predictor of susceptibility to NA inhibitors in vivo, as
measured in the validated ferret model of infection