Litcius/Paper detail

Emerging agents for the treatment of Chagas disease: what is in the preclinical and clinical development pipeline?

Nieves Martínez-Peinado, Núria Cortes-Serra, Irene Losada, Cristina Alonso‐Vega, Julio A. Urbina, Ana Rodrı́guez, John L. VandeBerg, María‐Jesús Pinazo, Joaquím Gascón, Julio Alonso-Padilla

2020Expert Opinion on Investigational Drugs38 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

ABSTRACT Introduction Chagas disease treatment relies on the lengthy administration of benznidazole and/or nifurtimox, which have frequent toxicity associated. The disease, caused by the parasite Trypanosoma cruzi, is mostly diagnosed at its chronic phase when life-threatening symptomatology manifest in approximately 30% of those infected. Considering that both available drugs have variable efficacy by then, and there are over 6 million people infected, there is a pressing need to find safer, more efficacious drugs. Areas covered We provide an updated view of the path to achieve the aforementioned goal. From state-of-the-art in vitro and in vivo assays based on genetically engineered parasites that have allowed high throughput screenings of large chemical collections, to the unfulfilled requirement of having treatment-response biomarkers for the clinical evaluation of drugs. In between, we describe the most promising pre-clinical hits and the landscape of clinical trials with new drugs or new regimens of existing ones. Moreover, the use of monkey models to reduce the pre-clinical to clinical attrition rate is discussed. Expert opinion In addition to the necessary research on new drugs and much awaited biomarkers of treatment efficacy, a key step will be to generalize access to diagnosis and treatment and maximize efforts to impede transmission.

Topics & Concepts

BenznidazoleNifurtimoxClinical trialMedicineIntensive care medicineDrug developmentChagas diseaseDiseaseDrugTropical diseasePharmacologyInvestigational DrugsDrug discoveryTrypanosoma cruziBioinformaticsBiologyImmunologyInternal medicineComputer scienceWorld Wide WebParasite hostingTrypanosoma species research and implicationsResearch on Leishmaniasis StudiesParasites and Host Interactions