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Advances in the Therapeutic Application of Small-Molecule Inhibitors and Repurposed Drugs against Snakebite

Upasana Puzari, Pedro Alexandrino Fernandes, Ashis K. Mukherjee

2021Journal of Medicinal Chemistry23 citationsDOI

Abstract

The World Health Organization has declared snakebite as a neglected tropical disease. Antivenom administration is the sole therapy against venomous snakebite; however, several limitations of this therapy reinforce the dire need for an alternative and/or additional treatment against envenomation. Inhibitors against snake venoms have been explored from natural resources and are synthesized in the laboratory; however, repurposing of small-molecule therapeutics (SMTs) against the principal toxins of snake venoms to inhibit their lethality and/or obnoxious effect of envenomation has been garnering greater attention owing to their established pharmacokinetic properties, low-risk attributes, cost-effectiveness, ease of administration, and storage stability. Nevertheless, SMTs are yet to be approved and commercialized for snakebite treatment. Therefore, we have systematically reviewed and critically analyzed the scenario of small synthetic inhibitors and repurposed drugs against snake envenomation from 2005 to date and proposed novel approaches and commercialization strategies for the development of efficacious therapies against snake envenomation.

Topics & Concepts

EnvenomationAntivenomSnake venomRepurposingDrug repositioningIntensive care medicinePharmacologyMedicineVenomChemistryDrugBiologyBiochemistryEcologyVenomous Animal Envenomation and StudiesRabies epidemiology and controlBioactive Natural Diterpenoids Research
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