Oral prodrug of remdesivir parent GS-441524 is efficacious against SARS-CoV-2 in ferrets

Robert M. Cox(Georgia State University), Josef D. Wolf(Georgia State University), Carolin M. Lieber(Georgia State University), Julien Sourimant(Georgia State University), Michelle J. Lin(University of Washington), Darius Babusis(Gilead Sciences (United States)), Venice DuPont(Gilead Sciences (United States)), Julie Chan(Gilead Sciences (United States)), Kim Barrett(Gilead Sciences (United States)), Diane S. Lye(Gilead Sciences (United States)), Rao Kalla(Gilead Sciences (United States)), Kwon Soo Chun(Gilead Sciences (United States)), Richard L. Mackman(Gilead Sciences (United States)), Chengjin Ye(Texas Biomedical Research Institute), Tomáš Cihlář(Gilead Sciences (United States)), Luis Martínez‐Sobrido(Texas Biomedical Research Institute), Alexander L. Greninger(University of Washington), John P. Bilello(Gilead Sciences (United States)), Richard K. Plemper(Georgia State University)
Nature Communications
November 5, 2021
Cited by 126Open Access
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Abstract

Remdesivir is an antiviral approved for COVID-19 treatment, but its wider use is limited by intravenous delivery. An orally bioavailable remdesivir analog may boost therapeutic benefit by facilitating early administration to non-hospitalized patients. This study characterizes the anti-SARS-CoV-2 efficacy of GS-621763, an oral prodrug of remdesivir parent nucleoside GS-441524. Both GS-621763 and GS-441524 inhibit SARS-CoV-2, including variants of concern (VOC) in cell culture and human airway epithelium organoids. Oral GS-621763 is efficiently converted to plasma metabolite GS-441524, and in lungs to the triphosphate metabolite identical to that generated by remdesivir, demonstrating a consistent mechanism of activity. Twice-daily oral administration of 10 mg/kg GS-621763 reduces SARS-CoV-2 burden to near-undetectable levels in ferrets. When dosed therapeutically against VOC P.1 gamma γ, oral GS-621763 blocks virus replication and prevents transmission to untreated contact animals. These results demonstrate therapeutic efficacy of a much-needed orally bioavailable analog of remdesivir in a relevant animal model of SARS-CoV-2 infection.


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