Peramivir
is an investigational influenza neuraminidase (NA) inhibitor, in the same class
as the approved flu drugs oseltamivir and zanamivir (Relenza). Blocking the activity
of neuraminidase interferes with flu virus replication, and is thought to work
by preventing newly formed virus particles from "budding" out of a host
cell.In
the first study, researchers from Shionogi and Co. in Japan investigated the inhibitory
effect of peramivir against avian (bird) influenza viruses both in vitro
and in vivo. In laboratory cell cultures and in mice, peramivir strong
inhibited neuraminidase activity and replication of various highly pathogenic
bird flu strains.
The
therapeutic effect after a single dose of peramivir was comparable to that of
repeated doses of oseltamivir or zanamivir for 5 days; when peramivir was given
for 5 days, its effectiveness was greater than that of the other 2 drugs used
for the same duration.
In
the second presentation, investigators with the S-021812 Clinical Study Group
described a trial evaluating a single intravenous dose of peramivir versus oral
oseltamivir for treatment of acute, uncomplicated seasonal influenza in an outpatient
setting.
A
previous Phase 2 placebo-controlled trial in Japan demonstrated that a single
dose of peramivir was effective in patients with acute influenza, the researchers
noted as background.
The
present Phase 3, double-blind, non-inferiority study included 1099 patients in
Japan, Korea, and Taiwan who had positive influenza rapid antigen tests. Participants
were randomly assigned to 3 groups, receiving either a 300 mg or a 600 mg single-dose
intravenous infusion of peramivir, or else 75 mg oral oseltamivir administered
twice-daily for 5 days. Treatment was started within 48 hours after the first
symptoms; individuals with severe symptoms were excluded.
In
an intent-to-treat analysis, the median time to alleviation of symptoms was similar
in the 300 mg peramivir arm (78.0 hours), the 600 mg peramivir arm (81.0 hours),
and the oseltamivir (arm (81.8 hours), demonstrating that peramivir, at either
dose, was non-inferior to oseltamivir. Furthermore, patients taking peramivir
had their fever return to normal significantly faster than those taking oseltamivir.
Peramivir
worked against seasonal flu strains that were resistant to oseltamivir. The rate
of adverse drug reactions was significantly lower in the 300 mg peramivir arm
than in the oseltamivir arm, due to fewer gastrointestinal symptoms.
The
investigators concluded that, "A single intravenous administration of peramivir
could be an alternative to oseltamivir to treat patients with acute influenza."
While
oral agents are often preferred to injected drugs in terms of long-term tolerability
and convenience, a single-dose injection may be favored over taking a drug for
several days. Furthermore, gastrointestinal symptoms of influenza (e.g., vomiting
and diarrhea) may make it difficult to effectively use an oral medication.
Researchers
are speeding up research on drugs they hope will be effective against the 2009
H1N1 "swine flu," which is now at pandemic levels and expected to spread
further during the North American fall/winter flu season.
This
study was conducted during the 2008-2009 flu season, before the emergence of the
novel H1N1 strain. However, the new flu strain is susceptible to neuraminidase
inhibitors including oseltamivir and zanamivir -- in fact, a non-approved injectable
formulation of zanamivir has recently been used as a rescue therapy for people
with severe symptoms -- suggesting that peramivir will also likely be effective.
Peramivir
currently has FDA "Fast Track" status in the U.S., and is being developed
by BioCryst Pharmaceuticals.
9/22/09
References
M
Kobayashi, M Kodama, R Yoshida, and others. Inhibitory Effect of Peramivir (S-021812,
BCX-1812) against Highly Pathogenic Avian Influenza Viruses. 49th Interscience
Conference on Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy (ICAAC 2009). San Francisco.
September 12-15, 2009. Abstract V-1064.
S
Kohono, MY Yen, HJ Cheong, and others. V-537a - Single-Intravenous Peramivir vs.
Oral Oseltamivir to Treat Acute, Uncomplicated Influenza in the Outpatient Setting:A
Phase III Randomized, Double-Blind Trial. V-537a. ICAAC 2009. Abstract V-537a.