A Randomized, Double-Blind Placebo Controlled Trial of Balapiravir, a Polymerase Inhibitor, in Adult Dengue Patients

Nguyet Minh Nguyen(Oxford University Clinical Research Unit), Chau Nguyen Tran(Oxford University Clinical Research Unit), Phung Khanh Lam(Oxford University Clinical Research Unit), Kien Thi Hue Duong(Oxford University Clinical Research Unit), Huy Huynh(Oxford University Clinical Research Unit), Jeremy Farrar(University of Oxford), Quyen Than Ha Nguyen(Oxford University Clinical Research Unit), Hien Tinh Tran(University of Oxford), Nguyễn Văn Vĩnh Châu(Hospital for Tropical Diseases), Laura Merson(Oxford University Clinical Research Unit), Long Hoàng(Genome Institute of Singapore), Martin L. Hibberd(Genome Institute of Singapore), Pauline Aw(Genome Institute of Singapore), Andreas Wilm(Genome Institute of Singapore), Niranjan Nagarajan(Genome Institute of Singapore), Dung Thi Nguyen(Hospital for Tropical Diseases), Mai Phuong Pham(Hospital for Tropical Diseases), Truong Thanh Nguyen(Hospital for Tropical Diseases), Hassan Javanbakht(La Roche College), Klaus Klumpp(La Roche College), Janet Hammond(La Roche College), Rosemary Petric(La Roche College), Marcel Wolbers(University of Oxford), Chinh Tran Nguyen(Hospital for Tropical Diseases), Cameron P. Simmons(University of Oxford)
The Journal of Infectious Diseases
July 17, 2012
Cited by 286Open Access
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Abstract

BACKGROUND: Dengue is the most common arboviral infection of humans. There are currently no specific treatments for dengue. Balapiravir is a prodrug of a nucleoside analogue (called R1479) and an inhibitor of hepatitis C virus replication in vivo. METHODS: We conducted in vitro experiments to determine the potency of balapiravir against dengue viruses and then an exploratory, dose-escalating, randomized placebo-controlled trial in adult male patients with dengue with <48 hours of fever. RESULTS: The clinical and laboratory adverse event profile in patients receiving balapiravir at doses of 1500 mg (n = 10) or 3000 mg (n = 22) orally for 5 days was similar to that of patients receiving placebo (n = 32), indicating balapiravir was well tolerated. However, twice daily assessment of viremia and daily assessment of NS1 antigenemia indicated balapiravir did not measurably alter the kinetics of these virological markers, nor did it reduce the fever clearance time. The kinetics of plasma cytokine concentrations and the whole blood transcriptional profile were also not attenuated by balapiravir treatment. CONCLUSIONS: Although this trial, the first of its kind in dengue, does not support balapiravir as a candidate drug, it does establish a framework for antiviral treatment trials in dengue and provides the field with a clinically evaluated benchmark molecule. CLINICAL TRIALS REGISTRATION: NCT01096576.


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