Background: Chemotherapy is an important tool for controlling enterovirus infections, but clinically effective antienterovirus drugs do not currently exist, mainly due to the development of drug resistance. We investigated the combination effects of enterovirus replication inhibitors in order to limit this process. In previous studies, we showed the efficacy of consecutive alternating administration of the triple combinations disoxaril/guanidine/oxoglaucine and pleconaril/guanidine/oxoglaucine against coxsackievirus B1 infection in newborn mice. Drug sensitivity tests of the viral brain isolates showed that these drug combinations prevented the development of drug resistance. Methods: In the current study, we replaced guanidine-HCl with enteroviral RNA synthesis inhibitor MDL-860 to test the effect of a new triple combination-pleconaril/MDL-860/oxoglaucine-applied via consecutive alternating administration in newborn mice infected subcutaneously with 20 MLD 50 of coxsackievirus B1. Results: The pleconaril/MDL-860/oxoglaucine combination via consecutive alternating administration showed high activity at the 75 mg/kg MDL-860 dose: a protective effect of 50% and a pronounced suppression of brain virus titers. Moreover, along with prevention of drug resistance, a phenomenon of increased drug sensitivity was established. MDL-860 sensitivity in pleconaril/MDL-860/oxoglaucine increased 8.2 times vs. placebo (29 times vs. monotherapy) on day 7 and oxoglaucine sensitivity-4.9 times vs. placebo (by 6.8 times vs. monotherapy) on day 13. As concerns pleconaril, a demonstrable prevention of drug resistance was registered without increase of drug sensitivity. Daily, simultaneous administration of pleconaril/MDL-860/oxoglaucine showed no protective effects and led to a rapid development of drug resistance. Conclusions: These results add new support for using consecutive alternating administration treatment courses to achieve clinically effective chemotherapy of enterovirus infections.
KeywordsAnimal model, compounds, drug combination, drug resistance, picornaviridaeIn recent decades, the interest on the role of enteroviruses (EVs) in human infectious pathology has increased.1-3 This is in part due to the large number of investigations carried out on a series of EV-induced infections manifested for the first time by epidemic spread in several regions of the globe, for example, the enterovirus 71 (EV 71) epidemic in Southeast Asia 4,5 and EV D68 in the USA. 6 Moreover, EVs are causative agents of an unusual phenomenon for the infectious pathology: one virus, in one region, during one period of time (the summer season), to cause more than 10 different clinical pictures affecting different