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A single cidofovir treatment rescues animals at progressive stages of lethal orthopoxvirus disease

BACKGROUND: In an event of a smallpox outbreak in humans, the window for efficacious treatment by vaccination with vaccinia viruses (VACV) is believed to be limited to the first few days post-exposure (p.e.). We recently demonstrated in a mouse model for human smallpox, that active immunization 2–3 ...

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Autores principales: Israely, Tomer, Paran, Nir, Lustig, Shlomo, Erez, Noam, Politi, Boaz, Shafferman, Avigdor, Melamed, Sharon
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: BioMed Central 2012
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3409050/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/22709563
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1743-422X-9-119
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author Israely, Tomer
Paran, Nir
Lustig, Shlomo
Erez, Noam
Politi, Boaz
Shafferman, Avigdor
Melamed, Sharon
author_facet Israely, Tomer
Paran, Nir
Lustig, Shlomo
Erez, Noam
Politi, Boaz
Shafferman, Avigdor
Melamed, Sharon
author_sort Israely, Tomer
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: In an event of a smallpox outbreak in humans, the window for efficacious treatment by vaccination with vaccinia viruses (VACV) is believed to be limited to the first few days post-exposure (p.e.). We recently demonstrated in a mouse model for human smallpox, that active immunization 2–3 days p.e. with either VACV-Lister or modified VACV Ankara (MVA) vaccines, can rescue animals from lethal challenge of ectromelia virus (ECTV), the causative agent of mousepox. The present study was carried out in order to determine whether a single dose of the anti-viral cidofovir (CDV), administered at different times and doses p.e. either alone or in conjunction with active vaccination, can rescue ECTV infected mice. METHODS: Animals were infected intranasally with ECTV, treated on different days with various single CDV doses and monitored for morbidity, mortality and humoral response. In addition, in order to determine the influence of CDV on the immune response following vaccination, both the "clinical take”, IFN-gamma and IgG Ab levels in the serum were evaluated as well as the ability of the mice to withstand a lethal challenge of ECTV. Finally the efficacy of a combined treatment regime of CDV and vaccination p.e. was determined. RESULTS: A single p.e. CDV treatment is sufficient for protection depending on the initiation time and dose (2.5 – 100 mg/kg) of treatment. Solid protection was achieved by a low dose (5 mg/kg) CDV treatment even if given at day 6 p.e., approximately 4 days before death of the control infected untreated mice (mean time to death (MTTD) 10.2). At the same time point complete protection was achieved by single treatment with higher doses of CDV (25 or 100 mg/kg). Irrespective of treatment dose, all surviving animals developed a protective immune response even when the CDV treatment was initiated one day p.e.. After seven days post treatment with the highest dose (100 mg/kg), virus was still detected in some organs (e.g. lung and liver) yet all animals survived, suggesting that efficacious single CDV treatment requires a potent immune system. The combination of CDV and vaccination provided no additional protection over CDV alone. Yet, combining CDV and vaccination maintained vaccination efficacy. CONCLUSIONS: Altogether, our data substantiate the feasibility of single post-exposure antiviral treatment to face orthopoxvirus infection.
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spelling pubmed-34090502012-08-01 A single cidofovir treatment rescues animals at progressive stages of lethal orthopoxvirus disease Israely, Tomer Paran, Nir Lustig, Shlomo Erez, Noam Politi, Boaz Shafferman, Avigdor Melamed, Sharon Virol J Research BACKGROUND: In an event of a smallpox outbreak in humans, the window for efficacious treatment by vaccination with vaccinia viruses (VACV) is believed to be limited to the first few days post-exposure (p.e.). We recently demonstrated in a mouse model for human smallpox, that active immunization 2–3 days p.e. with either VACV-Lister or modified VACV Ankara (MVA) vaccines, can rescue animals from lethal challenge of ectromelia virus (ECTV), the causative agent of mousepox. The present study was carried out in order to determine whether a single dose of the anti-viral cidofovir (CDV), administered at different times and doses p.e. either alone or in conjunction with active vaccination, can rescue ECTV infected mice. METHODS: Animals were infected intranasally with ECTV, treated on different days with various single CDV doses and monitored for morbidity, mortality and humoral response. In addition, in order to determine the influence of CDV on the immune response following vaccination, both the "clinical take”, IFN-gamma and IgG Ab levels in the serum were evaluated as well as the ability of the mice to withstand a lethal challenge of ECTV. Finally the efficacy of a combined treatment regime of CDV and vaccination p.e. was determined. RESULTS: A single p.e. CDV treatment is sufficient for protection depending on the initiation time and dose (2.5 – 100 mg/kg) of treatment. Solid protection was achieved by a low dose (5 mg/kg) CDV treatment even if given at day 6 p.e., approximately 4 days before death of the control infected untreated mice (mean time to death (MTTD) 10.2). At the same time point complete protection was achieved by single treatment with higher doses of CDV (25 or 100 mg/kg). Irrespective of treatment dose, all surviving animals developed a protective immune response even when the CDV treatment was initiated one day p.e.. After seven days post treatment with the highest dose (100 mg/kg), virus was still detected in some organs (e.g. lung and liver) yet all animals survived, suggesting that efficacious single CDV treatment requires a potent immune system. The combination of CDV and vaccination provided no additional protection over CDV alone. Yet, combining CDV and vaccination maintained vaccination efficacy. CONCLUSIONS: Altogether, our data substantiate the feasibility of single post-exposure antiviral treatment to face orthopoxvirus infection. BioMed Central 2012-06-18 /pmc/articles/PMC3409050/ /pubmed/22709563 http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1743-422X-9-119 Text en Copyright ©2012 Israely et al.; licensee BioMed Central Ltd. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0 This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Research
Israely, Tomer
Paran, Nir
Lustig, Shlomo
Erez, Noam
Politi, Boaz
Shafferman, Avigdor
Melamed, Sharon
A single cidofovir treatment rescues animals at progressive stages of lethal orthopoxvirus disease
title A single cidofovir treatment rescues animals at progressive stages of lethal orthopoxvirus disease
title_full A single cidofovir treatment rescues animals at progressive stages of lethal orthopoxvirus disease
title_fullStr A single cidofovir treatment rescues animals at progressive stages of lethal orthopoxvirus disease
title_full_unstemmed A single cidofovir treatment rescues animals at progressive stages of lethal orthopoxvirus disease
title_short A single cidofovir treatment rescues animals at progressive stages of lethal orthopoxvirus disease
title_sort single cidofovir treatment rescues animals at progressive stages of lethal orthopoxvirus disease
topic Research
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3409050/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/22709563
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1743-422X-9-119
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