Impact of Oseltamivir Treatment on Influenza A and B Virus Dynamics in Human Volunteers

被引:7
|
作者
Hooker, Kyla L. [1 ]
Ganusov, Vitaly V. [1 ,2 ,3 ]
机构
[1] Univ Tennessee, Genome Sci & Technol, Knoxville, TN 37996 USA
[2] Univ Tennessee, Dept Microbiol, Knoxville, TN 37996 USA
[3] Univ Tennessee, Dept Math, Knoxville, TN 37996 USA
关键词
influenza virus; shedding; humans; mathematical modeling; oseltamivir; RANDOMIZED CONTROLLED-TRIALS; TRANSMISSION; KINETICS; ILLNESS; DRUGS;
D O I
10.3389/fmicb.2021.631211
中图分类号
Q93 [微生物学];
学科分类号
071005 ; 100705 ;
摘要
Influenza viruses infect millions of humans every year causing an estimated 400,000 deaths globally. Due to continuous virus evolution current vaccines provide only limited protection against the flu. Several antiviral drugs are available to treat influenza infection, and one of the most commonly used drugs is oseltamivir (Tamiflu). While the mechanism of action of oseltamivir as a neuraminidase inhibitor is well-understood, the impact of oseltamivir on influenza virus dynamics in humans has been controversial. Many clinical trials with oseltamivir have been done by pharmaceutical companies such as Roche but the results of these trials until recently have been provided as summary reports or papers. Typically, such reports included median virus shedding curves for placebo and drug-treated influenza virus infected volunteers often indicating high efficacy of the early treatment. However, median shedding curves may be not accurately representing drug impact in individual volunteers. Importantly, due to public pressure clinical trials data testing oseltamivir efficacy has been recently released in the form of redacted PDF documents. We digitized and re-analyzed experimental data on influenza virus shedding in human volunteers from three previously published trials: on influenza A (1 trial) or B viruses (2 trials). Given that not all volunteers exposed to influenza viruses actually start virus shedding we found that impact of oseltamivir on the virus shedding dynamics was dependent on (i) selection of volunteers that were infected with the virus, and (ii) the detection limit in the measurement assay; both of these details were not well-articulated in the published studies. By assuming that any non-zero viral measurement is above the limit of detection we could match previously published data on median influenza A virus (flu A study) shedding but not on influenza B virus shedding (flu B study B) in human volunteers. Additional analyses confirmed that oseltamivir had an impact on the duration of shedding and overall shedding (defined as area under the curve) but this result varied by the trial. Interestingly, treatment had no impact on the rates at which shedding increased or declined with time in individual volunteers. Additional analyses showed that oseltamivir impacted the kinetics of the end of viral shedding, and in about 20-40% of volunteers that shed the virus treatment had no impact on viral shedding duration. Our results suggest an unusual impact of oseltamivir on influenza viruses shedding kinetics and caution about the use of published median data or data from a few individuals for inferences. Furthermore, we call for the need to publish raw data from critical clinical trials that can be independently analyzed.
引用
收藏
页数:13
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] Selection of influenza virus mutants in experimentally infected volunteers treated with oseltamivir
    Gubareva, LV
    Kaiser, L
    Matrosovich, MN
    Soo-Hoo, Y
    Hayden, FG
    JOURNAL OF INFECTIOUS DISEASES, 2001, 183 (04): : 523 - 531
  • [2] The Evolutionary Dynamics of Human Influenza B Virus
    Rubing Chen
    Edward C. Holmes
    Journal of Molecular Evolution, 2008, 66 : 655 - 663
  • [3] The evolutionary dynamics of human influenza B virus
    Chen, Rubing
    Holmes, Edward C.
    JOURNAL OF MOLECULAR EVOLUTION, 2008, 66 (06) : 655 - 663
  • [4] Oseltamivir treatment of influenza A and B infections in infants
    Mattila, Janna-Maija
    Vuorinen, Tytti
    Waris, Matti
    Antikainen, Petri
    Heikkinen, Terho
    INFLUENZA AND OTHER RESPIRATORY VIRUSES, 2021, 15 (05) : 618 - 624
  • [5] Oral oseltamivir in experimental human influenza B virus infection: Lack of resistance emergence
    Hayden, FG
    Ward, P
    Roberts, N
    ANTIVIRAL RESEARCH, 2000, 46 (01) : A54 - A54
  • [6] A pharmacologically immunosuppressed mouse model for assessing influenza B virus pathogenicity and oseltamivir treatment
    Marathe, Bindumadhav M.
    Mostafa, Heba H.
    Vogel, Peter
    Pascua, Philippe Noriel Q.
    Jones, Jeremy C.
    Russell, Charles J.
    Webby, Richard J.
    Govorkova, Elena A.
    ANTIVIRAL RESEARCH, 2017, 148 : 20 - 31
  • [7] Oral oseltamivir in human experimental influenza B infection
    Hayden, FG
    Jennings, L
    Robson, R
    Schiff, G
    Jackson, H
    Rana, B
    McClelland, G
    Ipe, D
    Roberts, N
    Ward, P
    ANTIVIRAL THERAPY, 2000, 5 (03) : 205 - 213
  • [8] Influenza B infection associated with encephalitis: Treatment with oseltamivir
    Straumanis, JP
    Tapia, MD
    King, JC
    PEDIATRIC INFECTIOUS DISEASE JOURNAL, 2002, 21 (02) : 173 - 175
  • [9] A comparison of the effectiveness of zanamivir and oseltamivir for the treatment of influenza A and B
    Kawai, Naoki
    Ikematsu, Hideyuki
    Iwaki, Norio
    Maeda, Tetsunari
    Kanazawa, Hideo
    Kawashima, Takashi
    Tanaka, Osame
    Yamauchi, Satoshi
    Kawamura, Kenichi
    Nagai, Toru
    Horii, Satsuki
    Hirotsu, Nobuo
    Kashiwagi, Seizaburo
    JOURNAL OF INFECTION, 2008, 56 (01) : 51 - 57
  • [10] Longer virus shedding in influenza B than in influenza A among outpatients treated with oseltamivir
    Kawai, Naoki
    Ikematsu, Hideyuki
    Iwaki, Norio
    Kawashima, Takashi
    Maeda, Tetsunari
    Mitsuoka, Satoru
    Kondou, Kunio
    Satoh, Letaka
    Miyachi, Kiyomitsu
    Yamaga, Shigeru
    Shigematsu, Takeshi
    Hirotsu, Nobuo
    Kashiwagi, Seizaburo
    JOURNAL OF INFECTION, 2007, 55 (03) : 267 - 272