Remdesivir (GS-5734) protects African green monkeys from Nipah virus challenge

Michael K. Lo(Centers for Disease Control and Prevention), Friederike Feldmann(National Institutes of Health), Joy Gary(Centers for Disease Control and Prevention), Robert Jordan(Gilead Sciences (United States)), Roy Bannister(Gilead Sciences (United States)), Jacqueline Cronin(National Institutes of Health), Nishi Patel(Centers for Disease Control and Prevention), John D. Klena(Centers for Disease Control and Prevention), Stuart T. Nichol(Centers for Disease Control and Prevention), Tomáš Cihlář(Gilead Sciences (United States)), Sherif R. Zaki(Centers for Disease Control and Prevention), Heinz Feldmann(National Institutes of Health), Christina F. Spiropoulou(Centers for Disease Control and Prevention), Emmie de Wit(National Institutes of Health)
Science Translational Medicine
May 29, 2019
Cited by 273Open Access
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Abstract

spp. fruit bats, to humans, it causes respiratory and neurological disease with a case-fatality rate about 70%. Human-to-human transmission has been observed during Nipah virus outbreaks in Bangladesh and India. A therapeutic treatment for Nipah virus disease is urgently needed. Here, we tested the efficacy of remdesivir (GS-5734), a broad-acting antiviral nucleotide prodrug, against Nipah virus Bangladesh genotype in African green monkeys. Animals were inoculated with a lethal dose of Nipah virus, and a once-daily intravenous remdesivir treatment was initiated 24 hours later and continued for 12 days. Mild respiratory signs were observed in two of four treated animals, whereas all control animals developed severe respiratory disease signs. In contrast to control animals, which all succumbed to the infection, all remsdesivir-treated animals survived the lethal challenge, indicating that remdesivir represents a promising antiviral treatment for Nipah virus infection.


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