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Topical Astodrimer Sodium, a Non-Toxic Polyanionic Dendrimer, Demonstrates Antiviral Activity in an Experimental Ocular Adenovirus Infection Model

Eric G. Romanowski, Kathleen A. Yates, Jeremy Ra Paull, Graham P. Heery, Robert M. Q. Shanks

2021Molecules15 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

There is no approved antiviral therapy for adenovirus (HAdV) ocular infections. Astodrimer sodium (SPL7013) is a polyanionic dendrimer with antiviral activity. The current study evaluated the ocular tolerability and anti-adenoviral efficacy of topical SPL7013 in rabbit ocular models. In a tolerability study, rabbits were treated with 3% SPL7013, vehicle, or 0.5% cidofovir. Their eyes were graded using the Draize scale. In antiviral efficacy studies, HAdV5 inoculated eyes were treated with 3% SPL7013, vehicle, or 0.5% cidofovir. Eyes were cultured for the virus on days 0, 1, 3, 4, 5, 7, 9, 11, and 14. Viral titers were determined. There were no differences in Draize scores between 3% SPL7013 and vehicle on any day. Cidofovir produced significantly higher Draize scores on day 12 than SPL7013 and vehicle. The 3% SPL7013 and 0.5% cidofovir significantly reduced daily viral titers and positive cultures per total compared with vehicle on several different days. The 3% SPL7013 and 0.5% cidofovir significantly reduced the duration of HAdV5 shedding compared to vehicle. The 3% SPL7013 demonstrated significantly more antiviral activity compared with vehicle in the Ad5/NZW rabbit ocular model. The 3% SPL7013 induced "minimal" to "practically non-irritating" Draize scores in the ocular tolerability study. Further development of astodrimer sodium as a topical antiviral therapy for adenoviral ocular infections is indicated.

Topics & Concepts

CidofovirTolerabilityMedicinePharmacologyTiterViral sheddingVirologyVirusAdverse effectVirus-based gene therapy researchHerpesvirus Infections and TreatmentsRNA Interference and Gene Delivery