Antiviral therapies on the horizon for influenza

Curr Opin Pharmacol. 2016 Oct:30:106-115. doi: 10.1016/j.coph.2016.08.003. Epub 2016 Aug 26.

Abstract

Adequate response to severe influenza infections or pandemic outbreaks requires two complementary strategies: preventive vaccination and antiviral therapy. The existing influenza drugs, M2 blockers and neuraminidase inhibitors, show modest clinical efficacy and established or potential resistance. In the past three years, several new agents have entered the clinical pipeline and already yielded some promising data from Phase 2 trials. For two main categories, that is, the broadly neutralizing anti-hemagglutinin antibodies and small-molecule inhibitors of the viral polymerase complex, crystallography was instrumental to guide drug development. These structural insights also aid to expand the activity spectrum towards influenza A plus B viruses, or conceive nucleoprotein or polymerase assembly inhibitors. The practice of influenza therapy should radically change in the next decade.

Publication types

  • Review
  • Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't

MeSH terms

  • Antiviral Agents / pharmacology
  • Antiviral Agents / therapeutic use*
  • Crystallography
  • Disease Outbreaks
  • Drug Design
  • Drug Resistance, Viral
  • Hemagglutinins, Viral / immunology
  • Humans
  • Influenza Vaccines / administration & dosage*
  • Influenza, Human / drug therapy*
  • Influenza, Human / prevention & control
  • Influenza, Human / virology
  • Pandemics

Substances

  • Antiviral Agents
  • Hemagglutinins, Viral
  • Influenza Vaccines