Abstract
With up to 500,000 infections annually, Lassa virus (LASV), the cause of Lassa fever, is one of the most prevalent etiological agents of viral hemorrhagic fever (VHF) in humans. LASV is endemic in several West African countries with sporadic cases and prolonged outbreaks observed most commonly in Sierra Leone, Liberia, Guinea and Nigeria. Additionally several cases of Lassa fever have been imported into North America, Europe and Asia making LASV a global threat to public health. Despite this, currently no approved therapeutic or vaccine exists to treat or prevent LASV infections. Here, using a passaged strain of LASV that is uniformly lethal in Hartley guinea pigs, we demonstrate that favipiravir, a broad-spectrum antiviral agent and leading treatment option for influenza, has potent activity against LASV infection. In this model, once daily treatment with favipiravir significantly reduced viral titers in tissue samples and reduced mortality rates when compared with animals receiving vehicle-only or ribavirin, the current standard of care for Lassa fever. Favipiravir remained highly effective against lethal LASV infection when treatments were initiated nine days post-infection, a time when animals were demonstrating advanced signs of disease. These results support the further preclinical evaluation of favipiravir for Lassa fever and other VHFs.
Similar content being viewed by others
Introduction
Viral hemorrhagic fevers (VHFs) are among the most deadly and feared group of diseases in humans and for most no approved vaccine or treatment exists1. Members of at least four families (Bunyaviridae, Filoviridae, Arenaviridae and Flaviviridae) are known to cause VHFs, though more etiological agents are likely to exist. While some VHFs are associated with sporadic but potentially explosive outbreaks, others are essentially endemic in specific geographical regions and are often associated with high annual incidence rates. With an estimated 300,000–500,000 infections annually, Lassa virus (LASV, Arenaviridae) is a perfect example of the latter group2,3. In humans, LASV infection can cause a wide variety of disease manifestations from essentially subclinical to severe hemorrhagic fever characterized by multi-organ failure and death, a condition known as Lassa fever (LF)2. The overall fatality rate for LF is between 1–2%; however, rates can increase to greater than 50% in nosocomial settings and community-based outbreaks4,5.
LASV is a prototypical member of the Arenaviridae; it has a bi-segmented RNA genome which produces five viral proteins using an ambi-sense coding strategy. In nature, LASV is maintained in the multi-mammate rat, Mastomys natalensis6. Although the ubiquitous M. natalensis is found across sub-Saharan Africa, evidence of infected rodents has exclusively been noted in Western African countries. Due to this, cases of LF are most commonly observed in Sierra Leona, Liberia, Guinea and Nigeria. These four countries represent the regions historically considered endemic for LASV/LF; though it is becoming increasingly clear that other West African nations, including Mali, Cote d’Ivoire, Benin and Ghana are also at risk for sporadic cases and potentially explosive outbreaks of LF7,8,9,10. Additionally, several imported cases of LF originating from West Africa have been diagnosed in Asia, the Americas and most commonly Europe, making LASV/LF a global concern for human health11.
The high annual incidence of LF in West Africa suggests a prophylactic vaccination strategy would be the most effective way of reducing the burden of LASV infection in this population. However, the lack of approved vaccines with no candidates currently in clinical trials necessitates the evaluation of therapeutic options, preferably those already approved for human use, for treating LASV infections and LF disease. To that end ribavirin, a broad spectrum antiviral agent which is licensed for the treatment of hepatitis C, is often used off-label to treat patients diagnosed with LF. Although ribavirin therapy has been shown to reduce the morbidity and mortality associated with LF, its limited efficacy is reliant on treatment initiation within 6 days of disease onset12.
Favipiravir (T-705; 6-fluoro-3-hydroxy-2-pyrazinecarboxamide) is a novel antiviral agent recently approved in Japan as an anti-influenza drug and Phase 3 clinical studies have been completed in the United States for the same indication. Previous studies demonstrated that favipiravir inhibits the RNA-dependent RNA polymerase of influenza and it is effective against all strains and serotypes that it has been tested13,14,15,16,17. However, like ribavirin, in vitro and/or in vivo studies suggest that favipiravir exhibits broad-spectrum antiviral activity against a variety of RNA viruses, including alpha-, paramyxo-, picorna- and caliciviruses, as well as etiological agents associated with VHFs including bunya-, flavi-, filo- and arenaviruses15,17,18,19,20,21,22,23,24,25,26,27,28,29. In most instances, in vitro studies have shown that the antiviral activity of favipiravir is similar to or better than that of ribavirin for most RNA virus15,17. Moreover, the safety of the compound has been thoroughly evaluated by the Japanese Ministry of Health, Labour and Welfare and the United States Food and Drug Administration (FDA). Clinical evaluation during the recent ongoing Ebola outbreak suggests that favipiravir is well tolerated by those receiving oral treatment in West Africa Ebola treatment centers30. Considering the above, favipiravir should be further evaluated both in animal models as well as clinical trials for a number of RNA viral infections.
Recently, favipiravir was shown to effectively prevent lethal disease associated with Pichindé virus infection in guinea pigs and hamsters which are surrogate disease models for VHFs of arenaviral etiology21,26,27. To date, the effectiveness of favipiravir has not been evaluated against pathogenic Old World arenaviruses. Therefore, in the present study, we investigated the antiviral efficacy of the compound in both cell culture and in vivo using using a guinea pig-adapted strain of LASV-Josiah (GPA-LASV) which is uniformly lethal in Hartley outbred guinea pigs.
Results
In vitro effect of favipiravir on infectious LASV titers
Treatment of LASV infected Vero cells with favipiravir resulted in diminished infectious viral titers in a dose dependent manner (Fig. 1). Analysis of infectious LASV titers (TCID50) in supernatants collected at day 3 and 5 post-infection from Vero cell cultures treated with varying concentrations of favipiravir resulted in EC90 values of 1.7 and 11.1 μg/ml, respectively. As expected, no toxicity was observed at the highest concentration tested (100 μg/ml), translating to SI values of >59 and >9 for the day 3 and day 5 assays, respectively.
Assessment of GPA-LASV infection in outbred guinea pigs for challenge dose determination for antiviral efficacy studies
Prior to conducting the favipiravir efficacy studies we sought to ensure the uniform lethality of GPA-LASV in outbred Hartley guinea pigs and to determine an approximate LD50 in these animals. All eight guinea pigs infected with GPA-LASV in the first experiment developed severe disease requiring euthanasia between days 14 and 19 post-infection with an average time to lethal disease of 15 days. In contrast, only a single animal infected with wild-type LASV Josiah developed severe disease and was euthanized 23 days post-infection (Fig. 2A). In a follow-up study, groups of four animals were infected with ten-fold serial dilutions of GPA-LASV. Animals which received low doses (10−1 to 101 TCID50) were refractory to lethal disease with essentially no signs of infection. A single animal infected with 102, two animals infected with 103 and all animals infected with 104 TCID50 of GPA-LASV developed severe disease (Fig. 2B). The approximate LD50 for GPA-LASV in outbred Hartley guinea pigs was calculated to be 103 TCID50. Based on these results subsequent experiments were conducted with a challenge dose of 105 TCID50, which is equivalent to 100 × the LD50.
In vivo efficacy of favipiravir treatment on lethal LASV infection in guinea pigs
Based on previous studies evaluating the efficacy of favipiravir against Pichindé virus in hamsters, a surrogate model for LF and Junin virus, a New World arenavirus, in guinea pigs; doses of 150 and 300 mg/kg/d were selected for the initial efficacy study21,26,31. Since ribavirin is often used to treat cases of LF, an additional group treated with ribavirin was included for comparison. Placebo treated animals developed a fever (defined here as a body temperature of ≥40 °C) beginning on day 6 post-infection which continued until the time of euthanasia (Fig. 3A). Although weight loss was variable in these animals, ranging from 8% to >20% loss from peak weight, the entire group was euthanized between 12 and 13 days post-infection based on overall condition (Fig. 3). Animals treated daily with 150 mg/kg favipiravir also developed a fever between days 8 and 12 post-infection which coincided with weight loss between 2 and 16% of peak body weight. A single animal in this group expired on day 12 post-infection; however it was not overtly ill and its death was likely due to difficulties with recovering from the isoflurane anesthesia used to sedate the animals prior to treatments. In contrast, animals treated at 300 mg/kg/d were completely protected against GPA-LASV infection with no weight loss noted across the entire group and only two animals developed a fever, though only on days 10 and 12 post-infection. Interestingly, in the ribavirin treated comparison group, two animals succumbed to infection on the final day of treatment (day 16 post-infection) and the remaining animals in this group quickly developed fever after cessation of treatment and rapidly lost weight (5 to >20% of peak body weight). The remaining four animals in this group succumbed to infection or were euthanized within 13 days (days 23 to 29 post-infection) after treatments were completed. Mock-infected animals treated with the high dose of favipiravir did not show any adverse signs associated with daily treatments.
Compared to the control (placebo treated) animals, the survival rates in favipiravir-treated animals were statistically significant with p values of <0.001 and <0.01 for the 300 and 150 mg/kg/d treatment groups, respectively (Fig. 3C). Although the ribavirin treated group demonstrated a significant delay in time to lethal disease compared to the control group with a p value of 0.001, survival outcome in favipiravir-treated animals was significantly better compared to the ribavirin group with p values of <0.001 and <0.05 for the 300 and 150 mg/kg/d treatment groups, respectively.
Viral titrations conducted on serum and tissue samples from each group of animals provide corroborating support for the efficacy of favipiravir against LASV infection (Fig. 4). Infectious viral titers in samples collected from animals treated daily with 300 mg/kg favipiravir were reduced by 2–3 logs compared with the placebo control group. Viral titers in tissues from the 150 mg/kg favipiravir treatment group were similar to those from the ribavirin comparison group and were approximately 1 log lower than the placebo control groups. Consistent with these findings, LASV antigen was not detected by IHC analysis in lung, liver or spleen samples collected from animals treated daily with 300 mg/kg favipiravir (Fig. 5). LASV antigen was detectable in all tissues examined from both the low dose favipiravir group as well as the ribavirin comparison group; however, the pattern of antigen staining in these tissues was less intense and more focal compared to the diffuse and coalescing patterns noted in the placebo controls (Fig. 5).
In the second efficacy experiment, we sought to determine if delayed treatment with favipiravir would remain effective in preventing lethal LASV infection. To that end, four groups of six guinea pigs were infected with GPA-LASV as in the first experiment and treatments for three groups with 300 mg/kg/d of favipiravir were initiated at 5, 7 and 9 days post-infection, while the forth control group received vehicle placebo beginning on day 5 post-infection. Once daily treatments for each group lasted for 14 consecutive days. The six control, placebo treated animals developed severe disease indicated by fever beginning on day 7 and significant weight loss (>20%) which first began on day 9 post-infection (Fig. 6A,B). The control animals succumbed to infection or were humanly euthanized between days 14 and 16 post-infection (Fig. 6C). Fever was uniformly noted across all treatment groups beginning on day 7 post-infection with the exception of the group which first received favipiravir on day 5. In this group, only a single animal had a temperature exceeding 40 °C and only on day 7 post-infection. Similarly, none of the animals in this group experienced any significant decreases in body weight. All six animals which began treatments on day 7 post-infection were febrile at time of treatment onset; however, fever resolved in four of these animals before day 9 post-infection (1–2 days post-treatment onset). Body temperature in the remaining two animals in this group returned to normal on or before days 11 and 15 post-infection and similar to the day 5 treatment group, no animals in this group experienced any significant decreases in body weight. Despite having increased temperatures for 2–4 days, the fever observed in animals in the day 9 treatment group resolved within 2–4 days after treatment onset. One animal in this group rapidly lost weight (>20% of peak body weight) and quickly became hypothermic (temperature <36 °C) resulting in it being humanely euthanized. The remaining animals in this group quickly recovered and only lost between 5 and 10% of peak body weight. The survival rates in all three treatment groups are statistically significant with p-values of <0.01 for the day 5 and day 7 treatment onset groups and <0.05 for the day 9 treatment onset group.
All surviving animals from both efficacy experiments demonstrated high titer (≥6400) anti-LASV nucleocapsid IgG antibodies in convalescent (day 42) serum samples; thereby confirming these animals were exposed to LASV.
Discussion
With an annual incidence rate of up to 500,000 infections, LASV is easily the second most prominent etiological agent of VHF, behind only dengue virus. In addition to a large endemic region comprising many countries in West Africa, dozens of imported cases of LF have been diagnosed in North America, Asia and Europe, which makes LASV/LF a global public health concern. Despite this, LF remains one of the world’s most neglected diseases with no licensed therapeutic or vaccine options currently available.
A limitation to evaluating potential therapeutics against LASV infection or LF disease is lack of readily available rodent models which can be utilized in initial efficacy studies. Currently, the only immuno-competent small animal disease models for the study of LASV infection are strain 13 and less commonly strain 2 inbred guinea pigs32. Although these models are based on infection with wild-type LASV isolates, a lack of commercial vendors to purchase these animals from limits their availability. Even institutes with in-house breeding colonies are hampered for the types of studies described here in that it can be difficult to produce sufficient numbers of guinea pigs within a limited size/age range at one time. Despite the commercial availability of outbred Hartley guinea pigs their use as an infection or disease model for LASV/LF is hampered by lethality rates of approximately 30%33, meaning antiviral studies like the one described here would require considerably larger group sizes in order to determine statistically significant differences between treatment and control animals.
In order to overcome these hurdles we utilized a strain of LASV Josiah which had been passaged from terminally-ill outbred guinea pigs into healthy animals, four times. The resultant isolate (GPA-LASV, unpublished data) demonstrated a uniformly lethal phenotype at challenge doses of 104 TCID50 or greater (LD50 = 103 TCID50). Histological abnormalities in this model recapitulated those commonly observed in the inbred strain 13 model34 with classical LASV lesions noted in liver (hepatocellular degeneration and lymphohistiocytic hepatitis), spleen (sinus histiocytosis) and lungs (interstitial pneumonia) of these animals (unpublished data). Combined, the GPA-LASV Hartley guinea pig model provided us a convenient small animal model to evaluate the antiviral efficacy of favipiravir against LASV infection and ensuing disease.
Following infection with 100 × the LD50 of GPA-LASV, placebo treated guinea pigs began to show signs of disease, including increased temperature and weight loss on days 6 and 8, respectively. Other signs of disease, including lethargy, ruffled fur, recumbency and reddening of ears and footpads appeared between days 9 and 11 post-infection. Animals in the placebo treatment group succumbed to infection or were euthanized between days 12 and 16 post-infection. Since ribavirin is currently the standard of care for LF patients, a comparison group was included in these studies. Animals treated with ribavirin appeared relatively normal throughout the treatment phase, although animals essentially only maintained their body weight with very minimal gains noted. Within two days of the end of treatments the four remaining animals in the ribavirin treatment group developed signs of disease and although treatment provided a prolonged time to death, it did not improve the overall survival rate. Similar results with ribavirin treatment (albeit at half the dose utilized here and by i.p. injection) in a guinea pig model of LF have been previously noted35. In contrast, treatment with the low and high doses of favipiravir provided significantly increased survival rates with only a single animal in the low dose group requiring euthanasia; though primarily because of difficulties recovering from anesthetic as opposed to disease severity. Nevertheless, animals in the 150 mg/kg/d treatment group experienced mild to moderate signs of disease which were delayed by 1–2 days compared to the control group, all of which resolved within 7–10 days of onset. Despite demonstrating similar infectious titers and IHC viral staining patterns to the ribavirin treatment group, animals in the low dose favipiravir group did not experience a recrudescent LASV infection after treatments were stopped.
Similar to recent favipiravir efficacy studies against Pichindé virus infection in guinea pigs21, animals receiving 300 mg/kg/d were completely protected from lethal LASV infection with no signs of disease observed throughout the course of the initial study. Supporting this, tissue samples collected at 12 days post-infection revealed infectious viral titers as much as 3 logs lower than the control animals with no viral antigen detectable by IHC. Importantly, treatment with 300 mg favipiravir/kg/d remained protective even when treatments were initiated several days after clinical signs of disease, a scenario which more closely mimics what would be expected for human cases of LF. Although animals which began treatment at 1 week or greater post-infection all experienced signs of disease, their condition quickly improved within a few days of the initiation of treatment. Only a single animal (treatment initiation at day 9 post-infection) did not respond fully to favirpiravir therapy with no resolution of signs of disease and eventual death. To put the concentration of favipiravir utilized in these studies in the context of human dosing, based on body surface area conversions36, 300 mg/kg in a guinea pig represents a human dose of 65 mg/kg, which is less than the 100 mg/kg day 1 loading dose (6 g of favipiravir, assuming 60 kg person; reduced to 40 mg/kg/d for days 2–10) being evaluated in the ongoing Ebola outbreak30.
Due to the often non-descript prodrome associated with many etiological agents of VHFs, the development and characterization of broad spectrum antivirals is vital to increase life expectance as well as to curtail potential human-to-human spread of some of these agents. Our present findings suggest that in addition to other emerging VHF agents including Ebola, Crimean-Congo-hemorrhagic fever, Andes and Junin viruses, favipiravir is highly effective at preventing lethal disease associated with LASV infection, even when treatments are initiated several days after the onset of clinical disease. Combined with its excellent tolerability in humans, these studies further suggest that favipiravir should be a front line treatment option for patients demonstrating symptoms of VHF.
Methods
Ethics statement
In vivo efficacy studies were approved by the Institutional Animal Care and Use Committee of the Rocky Mountain Laboratories (RML). Animal work was conducted adhering to the institution’s guidelines for animal use and followed the guidelines and basic principles in the United States Public Health Service Policy on Humane Care and Use of Laboratory Animals and the Guide for the Care and Use of Laboratory Animals by certified staff in an Association for Assessment and Accreditation of Laboratory Animal Care (AAALAC) International accredited facility.
Biosafety
All work with infectious LASV and potentially infectious materials derived from animals was conducted in a Biosafety Level 4 (BSL 4) laboratory in the Integrated Research Facility of the Rocky Mountain Laboratories (RML), National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (NIAID), National Institutes of Health (NIH). Sample inactivation and removal was performed according to standard operating protocols approved by the local Institutional Biosafety Committee.
Animals
Outbred male Hartley guinea pigs (300–350 g) (Charles River, Wilmington MA) were ear-tagged for identification and group housed, 2 per box in an isolator caging unit. For the in vivo efficacy studies animals were also subcutaneously implanted with IPTT-300 electronic transponders for temperature measurement with a DAS 6002 hand-held scanner (BMDS, Seaford, DE). Animals were acclimated to BSL 4 environment for one week prior to challenge and, in the antiviral studies, sorted so that the average body weights of each treatment group was similar.
Virus
In vitro studies were conducted with LASV strain Josiah37. In vivo experiments utilized a LASV strain Josiah that was passaged four times in Hartley guinea pigs (guinea pig-adapted LASV, GPA-LASV) resulting in a uniformly lethal phenotype in these animals (Safronetz, Feldmann, Geisbert, unpublished data). In the first in vivo experiment a comparison group of animals infected with wild-type LASV Josiah was included. Both viruses were propagated in Vero cell culture and titered using standard 50% tissue culture infectious dose (TCID50) infectivity assays and the Reed-Muench formula.
Antiviral compounds
Favipiravir was provided by the Toyama Chemical Company, Ltd. (Toyama, Japan) and Ribavirin was purchased from R & D Systems (Minneapolis, MN). For in vitro studies, compounds were dissolved directly in cell culture media (see below). For in vivo studies, the antiviral compounds were prepared in sterile water supplemented with 74.6 mg/ml meglumine excipient.
In vitro antiviral efficacy studies
In order to determine the 90% effective concentration (EC90) of favipiravir against LASV, nearly confluent (>95%) monolayers of Vero cells were infected with LASV Josiah at a multiplicity of infection (m.o.i.) of 0.01. After a 1 hour absorption, cells were washed and the inoculum replaced with culture media (Dulbecco’s modified Eagle’s medium supplemented with 2% fetal bovine serum, 100 U/ml penicillin, 100 μg/ml streptomycin and 2mM L-glutamine) containing varying concentrations (0, 0.1, 0.25, 0.5, 1, 2.5, 5, 12.5, 25, 50 or 100 μg/ml) of favipiravir. On days 3 and 5 post-infection supernatants were collected and infectious viral titers were determined as above. Cell viability was assessed visually at the time of sample collection. The EC90, which indicates the dose at which the viral titer is reduced by 1 log10, was calculated using basic linear regression analysis on the points in the linear range (r-squared >0.9). The maximum concentration of favipiravir utilized in these in vitro studies (100 μg/ml) is well below the documented 50% cytotoxic concentration (CC50) in Vero cells (>500 μg/ml)38. The selectivity index (SI) was calculated as CC50/EC90.
Determination of challenge dose for the GPA-LASV
In order to determine an appropriate challenge dose with the GPA-LASV we first conducted a pilot experiment to ensure uniform lethality of GPA-LASV in outbred Hartley guinea pigs. To that end two groups of eight guinea pigs were infected with 1 × 104 TCID50 of LASV or GPA-LASV (both strain Josiah) via intraperitoneal (i.p.) injection. Animals were monitored for disease progression for 42 days and were only euthanized if they reached a pre-determined clinical score indicative of advanced terminal disease (based on weight loss, mobility and respiration). In a second experiment, six groups of four guinea pigs were challenged with ten-fold serial dilutions of GPA-LASV (dose range 1 × 104 to 1 × 10−1 TCID50) by i.p. injection. Animals were monitored for disease progression for 42 days and were euthanized when they demonstrated signs of advanced terminal disease.
In vivo antiviral efficacy studies
The in vivo efficacy studies were conducted in two independent experiments. In the first study, three groups of nine guinea pigs were inoculated with 1 × 105 TCID50 GPA-LASV representing 100 × the 50% lethal dose (LD50) via i.p. injection. Beginning on day 2 post-infection, animals were treated for 14 consecutive days with favipiravir (150 or 300 mg/kg/d) or ribavirin (50 mg/kg/d). Since oral gavage is not recommended for guinea pigs, treatments were administered with once daily subcutaneous (s.c.) injections. A control group of six guinea pigs was inoculated with GPA-LASV as above and treated according to the same schedule with vehicle placebo. Additionally, three guinea pigs were mock-infected and included as normal controls. Animals were subjected to mild isoflurane anesthesia prior to each treatment. Weights and body temperatures were recorded every second day. At a time when control animals were showing signs of advanced, terminal disease three animals per treatment group were euthanized and tissue samples collected to assess the extent of viral replication. The remaining six animals per group were monitored for disease progression and survival for 42 days.
In the second experiment the efficacy of delayed treatment onset with favipiravir was assessed. Three groups of six guinea pigs were inoculated with GPA-LASV as above. Beginning on day 5, 7 and 9 post-infection, favipiravir treatments were initiated in one group of animals respectively with daily s.c. injections of 300 mg/kg/d for 14 consecutive days. A control group of six guinea pigs was inoculated as above and treated with vehicle placebo beginning on day 5 post-infection. Weights and temperatures were recorded every second day. Survivors were monitored for 42 days post-infection.
Virus detection
Tissues collected in the first efficacy experiment were tested for the presence of LASV via infectious viral titration assays as well as immunohistochemistry (IHC). For infectious titers, serial ten-fold dilutions of clarified tissue homogenates (10% weight by volume) were analyzed for viral loads on Vero cells via standard TCID50 methodologies. For IHC, tissue samples were inactivated and fixed with 10% formalin and processed according to standard methodologies. Thin sections were stained for viral antigen using a LASV GP2-specific monoclonal antibody (1:200 dilution, antibody L52-121-22, kindly provided by Dr. Lisa Hensley)39 on a Discovery XT instrument (Ventana Medical Systems, Tucson, AZ). Slides were blindly evaluated by a veterinary pathologist.
Serology
Seroconversion to LASV infection in convalescent serum samples collected from surviving animals in the treatment studies was assessed using standard enzyme-linked immunosorbent serological assay (ELISA) methodologies with an in-house recombinant, bacterially expressed LASV nucleocapsid protein as the antigen40.
Statistical analysis
Statistical differences between infectious titers in treatment groups were examined using one-way analysis of variance with Tukey-Kramer multiple-comparison posttest. Survival curves were compared using the log-rank (Mantel-Cox) test. Statistical analyses were accomplished using Prism 5 (GraphPad Software, La Jolla, CA).
Additional Information
How to cite this article: Safronetz, D. et al. The broad-spectrum antiviral favipiravir protects guinea pigs from lethal Lassa virus infection post-disease onset. Sci. Rep. 5, 14775; doi: 10.1038/srep14775 (2015).
References
Falzarano, D. & Feldmann, H. Vaccines for viral hemorrhagic fevers-progress and shortcomings. Current opinion in virology 3, 343–351, 10.1016/j.coviro.2013.04.007 (2013).
McCormick, J. B. & Fisher-Hoch, S. P. Lassa fever. Current topics in microbiology and immunology 262, 75–109 (2002).
McCormick, J. B. et al. A case-control study of the clinical diagnosis and course of Lassa fever. The Journal of infectious diseases 155, 445–455 (1987).
McCormick, J. B. Epidemiology and control of Lassa fever. Current topics in microbiology and immunology 134, 69–78 (1987).
Fisher-Hoch, S. P. et al. Review of cases of nosocomial Lassa fever in Nigeria: the high price of poor medical practice. Bmj 311, 857–859 (1995).
Monath, T. P., Newhouse, V. F., Kemp, G. E., Setzer, H. W. & Cacciapuoti, A. Lassa virus isolation from Mastomys natalensis rodents during an epidemic in Sierra Leone. Science 185, 263–265 (1974).
Sogoba, N., Feldmann, H. & Safronetz, D. Lassa fever in West Africa: evidence for an expanded region of endemicity. Zoonoses and public health 59 Suppl 2, 43–47, 10.1111/j.1863-2378.2012.01469.x (2012).
Safronetz, D. et al. Geographic distribution and genetic characterization of Lassa virus in sub-Saharan Mali. PLoS neglected tropical diseases 7, e2582, 10.1371/journal.pntd.0002582 (2013).
Fichet-Calvet, E. & Rogers, D. J. Risk maps of Lassa fever in West Africa. PLoS neglected tropical diseases 3, e388, 10.1371/journal.pntd.0000388 (2009).
Gunther, S. et al. Imported lassa fever in Germany: molecular characterization of a new lassa virus strain. Emerging infectious diseases 6, 466–476, 10.3201/eid0605.000504 (2000).
Macher, A. M. & Wolfe, M. S. Historical Lassa fever reports and 30-year clinical update. Emerging infectious diseases 12, 835–837, 10.3201/eid1205.050052 (2006).
McCormick, J. B. et al. Lassa fever. Effective therapy with ribavirin. The New England journal of medicine 314, 20–26, 10.1056/NEJM198601023140104 (1986).
Furuta, Y. et al. Mechanism of action of T-705 against influenza virus. Antimicrobial agents and chemotherapy 49, 981–986, 10.1128/AAC.49.3.981-986.2005 (2005).
Kiso, M. et al. T-705 (favipiravir) activity against lethal H5N1 influenza A viruses. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America 107, 882–887, 10.1073/pnas.0909603107 (2010).
Furuta, Y. et al. T-705 (favipiravir) and related compounds: Novel broad-spectrum inhibitors of RNA viral infections. Antiviral research 82, 95–102, 10.1016/j.antiviral.2009.02.198 (2009).
Sleeman, K. et al. In vitro antiviral activity of favipiravir (T-705) against drug-resistant influenza and 2009 A(H1N1) viruses. Antimicrobial agents and chemotherapy 54, 2517–2524, 10.1128/AAC.01739-09 (2010).
Furuta, Y. et al. Favipiravir (T-705), a novel viral RNA polymerase inhibitor. Antiviral research 100, 446–454, 10.1016/j.antiviral.2013.09.015 (2013).
Buys, K. K., Jung, K. H., Smee, D. F., Furuta, Y. & Gowen, B. B. Maporal virus as a surrogate for pathogenic New World hantaviruses and its inhibition by favipiravir. Antiviral chemistry & chemotherapy 21, 193–200, 10.3851/IMP1729 (2011).
Safronetz, D. et al. Antiviral efficacy of favipiravir against two prominent etiological agents of hantavirus pulmonary syndrome. Antimicrobial agents and chemotherapy 57, 4673–4680, 10.1128/AAC.00886-13 (2013).
Mendenhall, M. et al. T-705 (favipiravir) inhibition of arenavirus replication in cell culture. Antimicrobial agents and chemotherapy 55, 782–787, 10.1128/AAC.01219-10 (2011).
Mendenhall, M. et al. Effective oral favipiravir (T-705) therapy initiated after the onset of clinical disease in a model of arenavirus hemorrhagic Fever. PLoS neglected tropical diseases 5, e1342, 10.1371/journal.pntd.0001342 (2011).
Julander, J. G., Shafer, K., Smee, D. F., Morrey, J. D. & Furuta, Y. Activity of T-705 in a hamster model of yellow fever virus infection in comparison with that of a chemically related compound, T-1106. Antimicrobial agents and chemotherapy 53, 202–209, 10.1128/AAC.01074-08 (2009).
Julander, J. G., Smee, D. F., Morrey, J. D. & Furuta, Y. Effect of T-705 treatment on western equine encephalitis in a mouse model. Antiviral research 82, 169–171, 10.1016/j.antiviral.2009.02.201 (2009).
Rocha-Pereira, J. et al. Favipiravir (T-705) inhibits in vitro norovirus replication. Biochemical and biophysical research communications 424, 777–780, 10.1016/j.bbrc.2012.07.034 (2012).
Furuta, Y. et al. In vitro and in vivo activities of anti-influenza virus compound T-705. Antimicrobial agents and chemotherapy 46, 977–981 (2002).
Gowen, B. B. et al. Treatment of late stage disease in a model of arenaviral hemorrhagic fever: T-705 efficacy and reduced toxicity suggests an alternative to ribavirin. PloS one 3, e3725, 10.1371/journal.pone.0003725 (2008).
Gowen, B. B. et al. Assessing changes in vascular permeability in a hamster model of viral hemorrhagic fever. Virology journal 7, 240, 10.1186/1743-422X-7-240 (2010).
Smither, S. J. et al. Post-exposure efficacy of oral T-705 (Favipiravir) against inhalational Ebola virus infection in a mouse model. Antiviral research 104, 153–155, 10.1016/j.antiviral.2014.01.012 (2014).
Oestereich, L. et al. Evaluation of antiviral efficacy of ribavirin, arbidol and T-705 (favipiravir) in a mouse model for Crimean-Congo hemorrhagic fever. PLoS neglected tropical diseases 8, e2804, 10.1371/journal.pntd.0002804 (2014).
Efficacy of favipiravir against Ebola (JIKI), < https://clinicaltrials.gov/ct2/show/NCT02329054> (2014). Date of access: 26/05/2015.
Gowen, B. B. et al. Favipiravir (T-705) inhibits Junin virus infection and reduces mortality in a guinea pig model of Argentine hemorrhagic fever. PLoS neglected tropical diseases 7, e2614, 10.1371/journal.pntd.0002614 (2013).
Smith, D. R., Holbrook, M. R. & Gowen, B. B. Animal models of viral hemorrhagic fever. Antiviral research 112, 59–79, 10.1016/j.antiviral.2014.10.001 (2014).
Jahrling, P. B., Smith, S., Hesse, R. A. & Rhoderick, J. B. Pathogenesis of Lassa virus infection in guinea pigs. Infection and immunity 37, 771–778 (1982).
Safronetz, D. et al. A recently isolated lassa virus from mali demonstrates atypical clinical disease manifestations and decreased virulence in cynomolgus macaques. The Journal of infectious diseases 207, 1316–1327, 10.1093/infdis/jit004 (2013).
Cashman, K. A. et al. Evaluation of Lassa antiviral compound ST-193 in a guinea pig model. Antiviral research 90, 70–79, 10.1016/j.antiviral.2011.02.012 (2011).
Reagan-Shaw, S., Nihal, M. & Ahmad, N. Dose translation from animal to human studies revisited. FASEB journal: official publication of the Federation of American Societies for Experimental Biology 22, 659–661, 10.1096/fj.07-9574LSF (2008).
Wulff, H. & Johnson, K. M. Immunoglobulin M and G responses measured by immunofluorescence in patients with Lassa or Marburg virus infections. Bulletin of the World Health Organization 57, 631–635 (1979).
Gowen, B. B. et al. In vitro and in vivo activities of T-705 against arenavirus and bunyavirus infections. Antimicrobial agents and chemotherapy 51, 3168–3176, 10.1128/AAC.00356-07 (2007).
Hensley, L. E. et al. Pathogenesis of Lassa fever in cynomolgus macaques. Virology journal 8, 205, 10.1186/1743-422X-8-205 (2011).
Safronetz, D. et al. A Recombinant Vesicular Stomatitis Virus-Based Lassa Fever Vaccine Protects Guinea Pigs and Macaques against Challenge with Geographically and Genetically Distinct Lassa Viruses. PLoS neglected tropical diseases 9, e0003736, 10.1371/journal.pntd.0003736 (2015).
Acknowledgements
This work was supported in part by the Division of Intramural Research (DIR) of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (NIAID), National Institutes of Health (NIH) and the Rocky Mountain RCE (subaward to BBG as part of NIH grant U54 AI-065357; J. Belisle, PI). We thank Sandy Skorupa, Jayne Faris, Amanda Weidow, Kathy Cordova and Richard Cole for assistance with animal procedures and husbandry and Tina Thomas, Rebecca Rosenke and Dan Long for preparing the slides for IHC (Rocky Mountain Veterinary Branch, NIAID, NIH).
Author information
Authors and Affiliations
Contributions
D.S., J.B.W., Y.F., T.K., H.F. and B.B.G. conceived and designed the study. D.S., K.R., C.M., A.O., J.G., T.W.G. and G.S. performed the experiments. D.S. and B.B.G. wrote the manuscript. J.B.W. prepared the figures. All authors reviewed the manuscript.
Ethics declarations
Competing interests
Y.F. and T.K. are employees of the Toyama Chemical Co., Ltd., the manufacturer of favipiravir. All other authors declare that no competing interests exist.
Rights and permissions
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License. The images or other third party material in this article are included in the article’s Creative Commons license, unless indicated otherwise in the credit line; if the material is not included under the Creative Commons license, users will need to obtain permission from the license holder to reproduce the material. To view a copy of this license, visit http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
About this article
Cite this article
Safronetz, D., Rosenke, K., Westover, J. et al. The broad-spectrum antiviral favipiravir protects guinea pigs from lethal Lassa virus infection post-disease onset. Sci Rep 5, 14775 (2015). https://doi.org/10.1038/srep14775
Received:
Accepted:
Published:
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/srep14775
This article is cited by
-
Lassa fever — the road ahead
Nature Reviews Microbiology (2023)
-
A Lassa virus mRNA vaccine confers protection but does not require neutralizing antibody in a guinea pig model of infection
Nature Communications (2023)
-
ChAdOx1-vectored Lassa fever vaccine elicits a robust cellular and humoral immune response and protects guinea pigs against lethal Lassa virus challenge
npj Vaccines (2021)
-
A recombinant vesicular stomatitis-based Lassa fever vaccine elicits rapid and long-term protection from lethal Lassa virus infection in guinea pigs
npj Vaccines (2019)
-
Non-neutralizing antibodies elicited by recombinant Lassa–Rabies vaccine are critical for protection against Lassa fever
Nature Communications (2018)
Comments
By submitting a comment you agree to abide by our Terms and Community Guidelines. If you find something abusive or that does not comply with our terms or guidelines please flag it as inappropriate.