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Randomized single oral dose phase 1 study of safety,tolerability, and pharmacokinetics of Iminosugar UV-4 Hydrochloride (UV-4B) in healthy subjects
Authors:Michael Callahan  Anthony M. Treston  Grace Lin  Marla Smith  Brian Kaufman  Mansoora Khaliq  Lisa Evans DeWald  Kevin Spurgers  Kelly L. Warfield  Preeya Lowe  Matthew Duchars  Aruna Sampath  Urban Ramstedt
Affiliation:1. Division of Infectious Diseases, Massachusetts General Hospital, Massachusetts, United States of America;2. Emergent BioSolutions Inc, Gaithersburg, Maryland, United States of America;3. AbViro, Bethesda, Maryland, United States of America; University of Washington, UNITED STATES
Abstract:
BackgroundUV-4 (N-(9’-methoxynonyl)-1-deoxynojirimycin, also called MON-DNJ) is an iminosugar small-molecule oral drug candidate with in vitro antiviral activity against diverse viruses including dengue, influenza, and filoviruses and demonstrated in vivo efficacy against both dengue and influenza viruses. The antiviral mechanism of action of UV-4 is through inhibition of the host endoplasmic reticulum-resident α-glucosidase 1 and α-glucosidase 2 enzymes. This inhibition prevents proper glycan processing and folding of virus glycoproteins, thereby impacting virus assembly, secretion, and the fitness of nascent virions.Methodology/Principal findingsHere we report a first-in-human, single ascending dose Phase 1a study to evaluate the safety, tolerability, and pharmacokinetics of UV-4 hydrochloride (UV-4B) in healthy subjects (ClinicalTrials.gov Identifier {"type":"clinical-trial","attrs":{"text":"NCT02061358","term_id":"NCT02061358"}}NCT02061358). Sixty-four subjects received single oral doses of UV-4 as the hydrochloride salt equivalent to 3, 10, 30, 90, 180, 360, 720, or 1000 mg of UV-4 (6 subjects per cohort), or placebo (2 subjects per cohort). Single doses of UV-4 hydrochloride were well tolerated with no serious adverse events or dose-dependent increases in adverse events observed. Clinical laboratory results, vital signs, and physical examination data did not reveal any safety signals. Dose-limiting toxicity was not observed; the maximum tolerated dose of UV-4 hydrochloride in humans has not yet been determined (>1000 mg). UV-4 was rapidly absorbed and distributed after dosing with the oral solution formulation used in this study. Median time to reach maximum plasma concentration ranged from 0.5–1 hour and appeared to be independent of dose. Exposure increased approximately in proportion with dose over the 333-fold dose range. UV-4 was quantifiable in pooled urine over the entire collection interval for all doses.Conclusions/SignificanceUV-4 is a host-targeted broad-spectrum antiviral drug candidate. At doses in humans up to 1000 mg there were no serious adverse events reported and no subjects were withdrawn from the study due to treatment-emergent adverse events. These data suggest that therapeutically relevant drug levels of UV-4 can be safely administered to humans and support further clinical development of UV-4 hydrochloride or other candidate antivirals in the iminosugar class.Trial registrationClinicalTrials.gov {"type":"clinical-trial","attrs":{"text":"NCT02061358","term_id":"NCT02061358"}}NCT02061358 https://clinicaltrials.gov/ct2/show/{"type":"clinical-trial","attrs":{"text":"NCT02061358","term_id":"NCT02061358"}}NCT02061358.
Keywords:
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