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Current Pharmaceutical Design

Editor-in-Chief

ISSN (Print): 1381-6128
ISSN (Online): 1873-4286

Current Status of Anti-Picornavirus Therapies

Author(s): Dale L. Barnard

Volume 12, Issue 11, 2006

Page: [1379 - 1390] Pages: 12

DOI: 10.2174/138161206776361129

Price: $65

Abstract

Picornaviruses are important human pathogens causing severe morbidity and some mortality with the potential to cause worldwide crippling disease. Currently, there are few treatments for many of the viruses in the Picornaviridae, For rhinoviruses, there are no approved treatments, although ruprintrivir looks promising in clinical trials and pyridazinyl oxime ethers may prove useful. Poliovirus treatments are needed to supplement the World Health Organizations polio eradication plan in order to treat infections caused by reversion of the attenuated vaccine virus and to supplement vaccine coverage control in polio endemic areas. However, no promising compounds for treatment of poliovirus have been developed due to the efficacy of the vaccines in use. Broad-spectrum inhibitors developed for other picornavirus may be useful for poliovirus infections. Coxsackievirus infections in children and in infants are being treated with pleconaril with some efficacy in reducing mortality and improving recovery, albeit the treatment is often on a compassionate use basis. There are no therapies for echovirus infections. Very little drug discovery research is being done to develop inhibitors for echovirus infections, probably due to the broad-spectrum inhibition exhibited by capsid binding agents and protease inhibitors discovered for treatment of other picornaviruses. For example, pyridazinyl oxime ethers are inhibitory to most echoviruses. Treatments for enterovirus infections are also limited, although in a small clinical trial, milrinone seemed to reduce mortality and improve recovery from EV71-induced pulmonary edema. Thus, these results strongly emphasize the need for the development of potent and nontoxic compounds for the treatment of picornavirus infections.

Keywords: therapy, antiviral, enterovirus, poliovirus, coxsackievirus, echovirus, rhinovirus, Picornavirus


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