Progress in the development of poliovirus antiviral agents and their essential role in reducing risks that threaten eradication

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Abstract

Chronic prolonged excretion of vaccine-derived polioviruses by immunodeficient persons (iVDPV) presents a personal risk of poliomyelitis to the patient as well as a programmatic risk of delayed global eradication. Poliovirus antiviral drugs offer the only mitigation of these risks. Antiviral agents may also have a potential role in the management of accidental exposures and in certain outbreak scenarios. Efforts to discover and develop poliovirus antiviral agents have been ongoing in earnest since the formation in 2007 of the Poliovirus Antivirals Initiative. The most advanced antiviral, pocapavir (V-073), is a capsid inhibitor that has recently demonstrated activity in an oral poliovirus vaccine human challenge model. Additional antiviral candidates with differing mechanisms of action continue to be profiled and evaluated preclinically with the goal of having 2 antivirals available for use in combination to treat iVDPV excreters.

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McKinlay, M. A., Collett, M. S., Hincks, J. R., Steven Oberste, M., Pallansch, M. A., Okayasu, H., … Dowdle, W. R. (2014). Progress in the development of poliovirus antiviral agents and their essential role in reducing risks that threaten eradication. Journal of Infectious Diseases, 210, S447–S453. https://doi.org/10.1093/infdis/jiu043

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