New medicine fights bird flu better
December 22nd, 2009 - 2:03 pm ICT by IANS ( Leave a comment )Washington, Dec 22 (IANS) A new drug on the threshold of final testing in humans may be more potent and safer for treating the deadly bird flu than the antiviral drug Tamiflu, scientists have found.
Known as T-705, the compound even works several days after infection, according to Yoshihiro Kawaoka, University of Wisconsin-Madison (UW-M) virologist and senior study author.
“H5N1 virus is so pathogenic that even Tamiflu doesn’t protect all the infected animals. This compound works much better, even three days after infection,” explains Kawaoka, professor of pathobiological sciences at the UW-M.
The study was conducted in mice and demonstrated that the compound was effective and safe against H5N1, the highly pathogenic bird flu virus, which some scientists fear could spark a global epidemic of deadly flu.
The compound is also effective against seasonal flu and more worrisome varieties such as the H1N1 virus, and has already been tested against circulating seasonal influenza in humans in Japan where it is on the brink of Phase III clinical trials.
Antiviral drugs are viewed as a readily available first line of defence against pandemic flu and are especially important for protecting health workers and others during an outbreak of disease.
Vaccines, which utilise inactivated or weakened viruses to confer immunity, are the primary line of defence for influenza, but require months to formulate and mass-produce, says a UW-M release.
The findings were published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (PNAS).
- Novel inhaled drug found effective against H5N1 avian influenza virus - Feb 26, 2010
- Experimental compound found effective against deadly bird flu - Dec 22, 2009
- Human, bird flu virus interaction can create more virulent strains - Feb 23, 2010
- H1N1 used new trick to cause pandemic - Aug 06, 2010
- Swine flu virus more dangerous than previously believed - Jul 14, 2009
- Triple-combo drug may treat resistant swine flu - Oct 28, 2009
- Some strains of influenza becoming drug-resistant - Sep 15, 2011
- Molecular changes that helped Tamiflu resistance explained - Jun 04, 2010
- Experimental drug cocktail may help fight antiviral-resistant swine flu - Oct 28, 2009
- Pandemic flu virus may become resistant to Tamiflu - Mar 02, 2010
- Genes that gave 1918 flu virus extraordinary virulence identified - Dec 30, 2008
- Swine flu may become resistant to Tamiflu - Mar 02, 2010
- H1N1 drug Tamiflu effectiveness questioned - Dec 12, 2009
- Tamiflu may prevent pneumonia in swine flu patients - Sep 29, 2010
- H1N1 pandemic flu strain 'key to universal vaccine' - Jan 11, 2011
Tags: antiviral drug, antiviral drugs, bird flu, bird flu virus, deadly flu, global epidemic, health workers, line of defence, national academy of sciences, new medicine, pandemic flu, pathobiological sciences, pnas, proceedings of the national academy, proceedings of the national academy of sciences, protecting health, study author, tamiflu, university of wisconsin madison, virologist