The researchers combined remdesivir, which doctors already prescribe to hospitalized patients with COVID-19, with different hepatitis C virus (HCV) medications. They hoped to identify a combination that slows viral replication.
“Here we see a promising synergy that, if confirmed through additional research and clinical trials, could provide a new antiviral to combat COVID-19,” says Dr. Gaetano Montelione, Ph.D., a professor at Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute in Troy, NY.
COVID-19 background
Since the World Health Organization (WHO) declared the novel coronavirus a pandemic in March 2020, nearly 150 million people have contracted the virus, and approximately 3 million have died.
Over the past year, researchers have investigated numerous drugs and therapies to help treat COVID-19.
Remdesivir, for example, can treat COVID-19 in an inpatient setting. According to one articleTrusted Source, remdesivir can “target specific viral enzymes or attack a weak point of viral replication within the host.”
Certain corticosteroids, such as dexamethasone, can reduce inflammation in people with COVID-19.
Researchers also considered using hydroxychloroquine to treat COVID-19. Doctors use hydroxychloroquine to treat malaria and rheumatoid arthritis, but further research showed that it did more harmTrusted Source than good in people with COVID-19.
Remdesivir and HCV drugs
The authors of the recent paper, which appears as a pre-proof in the journal Cell Reports, considered 10 different HCV drugs in their study. Their goal was to find something that amplified the effects of remdesivir in people with COVID-19.
The research team thought that the HCV drugs could bind to an enzyme called MproTrusted Source. This enzyme is SARS-CoV-2’s main protease, which is essential for viral replication.
The team tested the HCV drugs in monkey and human cells. They found that 7 of the 10 drugs could act as a SARS-CoV-2 inhibitor.
Although seven drugs were effective at inhibiting replication of the virus, further experiments showed that four of them inhibited a different protease called PLpro.
The four drugs that were effective at boosting the benefits of remdesivir were paritaprevir, grazoprevir, simeprevir, and vaniprevir.
Those drugs synergized with remdesivir. This means that they increased remdesivir’s effectiveness at reducing viral replication by “as much as 10-fold.”
“Combined use of remdesivir with PLpro inhibitors for the treatment of COVID-19 could be a game changer for [people] with COVID-19 who are not vaccinated,” says study author Dr. Adolfo Garcia-Sastre.
Dr. Kris White, an assistant professor of microbiology at Icahn Mount Sinai in New York City, NY, believes that the new research could “produce a highly effective antiviral cocktail.”
Chris Coleman, an assistant professor of infection immunology at the University of Nottingham in the United Kingdom, told Medical News Today that this research has “multiple positive aspects.”
“Targeting two steps of the viral replication means you hit the virus twice, making it less likely that the virus will mutate to escape the treatment,” he explained.