Abstract
We demonstrate the potent antiviral activity of a novel viral neuraminidase (sialidase) inhibitor, 4-guanidino-2,4-dideoxy-2,3-dehydro-N-acetylneuraminic acid (GG167), administered by the intranasal route in comparison with those of amantadine and ribavirin in experimental respiratory tract infections induced with influenza A and B viruses. In an extended study in which mice were infected (day 0) with influenza A/Singapore/1/57 virus, with treatments given prophylactically plus twice daily over days 0 to 3 and with mice observed to day 10, we show that intranasally administered GG167 at 0.4 and 0.01 mg/kg of body weight per dose reduced mortality, lung consolidation, and virus titers in the lung, with no virus growing back following the cessation of treatment. In other studies with influenza B/Victoria/102/85 virus in which infected mice were culled after the cessation of treatment, the calculated intranasal dose required to reduce virus titers in the lungs of treated animals to 10% of that seen in untreated controls (EDAUC10 [where AUC is area under the virus titer days curve]) was 0.085 mg/kg per dose. GG167 was inactive against influenza viruses A and B when given by the intraperitoneal or oral route (EDAUC10, > 100 mg/kg per dose). GG167 was metabolically stable, with an elimination half-life of 10 min following intravenous administration. While readily bioavailable by systemic routes, it was poorly bioavailable by the oral route. Its potent efficacy by the intranasal route but lack of efficacy by other routes, relative to those of amantadine and ribavirin, was explicable in terms of its in vitro activity, bioavailability, and pharmacokinetic properties and with the extracellular activity of viral sialidase.