RSV leading cause of hospitalization among infants, researchers note.
An 
experimental drug shows promise in treating respiratory syncytial virus 
(RSV), a leading cause of pneumonia in infants, researchers report.
"We are finally making major progress in being able to treat human 
RSV infections -- the world's second leading cause of serious viral 
pneumonia, second only to influenza virus," said study author Dr. John 
DeVincenzo, a professor of pediatrics at the University of Tennessee 
College of Medicine in Memphis. 
"There is no current treatment or vaccine for RSV pneumonia, and so 
patients were previously forced to get over the virus by themselves," he
 said. RSV is the leading cause of hospitalization among infants in the 
United States, the researchers noted.
In this small study of 140 adults, the drug, dubbed GS-5806, reduced 
the amount of the virus in the systems of those who received the 
medication.
"For the first time, we showed that once we reduce the amount of 
virus in patients, they very quickly started to feel better," DeVincenzo
 said.
Moreover, the drug appeared safe and easy to give, he said.
DeVincenzo noted that infants, the elderly and people with lung 
conditions and immune system problems are those most at risk for RSV. 
"The virus can cause severe disease, hospitalization and death in these 
populations," he said.
The finding paves the way for this new antiviral medicine to be tried in those groups of people, DeVincenzo added.
The report was published Aug. 21 in the New England Journal of Medicine.
Dr. Otto Ramos, an infectious disease specialist at  Miami Children's
 Hospital, said, "I think this is promising. Obviously, this is just the
 first step of one in many."
How well it will work in children and how well it is tolerated is 
still an unanswered question, he noted. "Whether it is going to have the
 same effect is yet to be determined," Ramos said.
For the study, DeVincenzo and colleagues tried GS-5806 on healthy 
adults who had been infected with RSV. The drug was given in varying 
doses to 87 of 140 participants, while the others received an inactive 
placebo.
DeVincenzo said that the drug was first tried on adults because of 
ethical issues surrounding the purposeful infection of volunteers in the
 trial.
"Babies and certain other populations, including the mentally 
disabled, cannot weigh risks and benefits fully and therefore cannot be 
asked to participate in a trial of a medicine that is experimental, and 
that there is not clear evidence of benefit to themselves personally," 
he said. "Competent adults can choose to accept risk to themselves based
 on purely an altruistic potential future benefit to mankind."
Almost all medicines developed for children are first developed for 
adult diseases and then given to children once the drug's safety and 
efficacy are established, DeVincenzo explained. 
"However, there are some diseases of infants and children which do 
not have a clear parallel disease in adults," he said. "RSV is one of 
these pediatric-specific diseases. For this and other reasons, we first 
showed that we could safely infect adults with the virus that caused a 
similar, though much milder, disease in these adults. Then we treated 
these experimentally infected adults with our newly discovered antiviral
 drug."
Side effects of the treatment were mild, DeVincenzo noted. "There 
were a small number of laboratory tests that became abnormal during the 
therapy. These laboratory abnormalities are commonly seen in many types 
of medications, and were a small drop in the white blood [cell] count 
and mild elevations in liver enzymes, which are routinely measured for 
safety assessments," he said.
Based on this trial, DeVincenzo said trials of the drug in infants and in the elderly are being planned. 
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