Flu drug creates drug-resistant virus
The drug industry often
hypes new drugs in order to boost stock prices, and the medical profession
is frequently just as overly optimistic – but in reality, the benefits of
most of the drugs studied and marketed are minimal.
According to a study
published in the British medical journal The Lancet, that’s again the
case with a drug that was supposed to act as a front-line defense for the
next flu pandemic. It turns out that using the drug creates in a
drug-resistant influenza virus capable of infecting new human hosts.
The study of Japanese
children with influenza and treated with the antiviral drug oseltamivir was
conducted by an international team of researchers led by virologist
Yoshihiro Kawaoka of the University of Wisconsin-Madison and the University
of Tokyo. Results of the study showed that nearly 20 percent of patients
treated with the drug produced mutant drug-resistant viruses as soon as four
days after treatment. Moreover, patients continued to shed significant
amounts of infectious viral particles even after five days of treatment with
the potent antiviral agent.
"The problem with this
compound is that a single (genetic) mutation makes the virus resistant,"
says Kawaoka, an authority on influenza who holds an appointment at the
UW-Madison School of Veterinary Medicine.
The finding is
important because it provides evidence that influenza viruses can easily and
quickly thwart one of the few lines of defense for a disease that claims
many lives each year and that, in a pandemic, is among the world's most
feared and deadly diseases.
"The importance of this
work is that when a pandemic occurs with a new virus and this drug is
extensively used, then we may be faced with the rapid appearance of
resistant viruses," Kawaoka says.
At present, there are
only two strategies for stemming the spread of influenza: vaccines and
antiviral drugs. Vaccines use inactivated forms of a virus in hopes of
boosting the immune system and thwarting the infection. Antiviral drugs such
as oseltamivir work by inhibiting key proteins on the surface of the virus,
locking them in their host cells and supposedly preventing the virus from
escaping and infecting new cells and hosts.
The last flu pandemic
was in 1968. The influenza pandemic of 1918 was a global tragedy, claiming
21 million lives -- more than died in battle in World War I. One billion
people -- nearly half of the earth's population at the time - were infected.
The new study of
Japanese children portrays what might happen in a pandemic as the immune
system of a child, never before exposed to a flu virus, mirrors the adult
human immune system exposed to the new, more virulent forms of flu virus at
the root of pandemics.
"Most of the children
we looked at are younger than 3 years old," Kawaoka explains. "They're
encountering the flu virus for the first time. In this respect, our
population of patients might be considered comparable to one experiencing
pandemic influenza in the absence of pre-existing immunity."
The study of 50
Japanese children with influenza, says Kawaoka, suggests that oseltamivir-resistant
viruses arise frequently in children treated with the drug.
"We don't know how
virulent these viruses are, but they can be a source of another infection,
possibly by resistant viruses," he says.
Oseltamivir is a
well-known drug and is widely used in Japan. Its use in the United States is
restricted, primarily because of cost.
SOURCE:
“Resistant influenza A viruses in children treated with oseltamivir:
descriptive study” The Lancet, August 31, 2004.