1. Academic Validation
  2. EDP-938 Has a High Barrier to Resistance in Healthy Adults Experimentally Infected with Respiratory Syncytial Virus

EDP-938 Has a High Barrier to Resistance in Healthy Adults Experimentally Infected with Respiratory Syncytial Virus

  • J Infect Dis. 2024 Oct 23:jiae471. doi: 10.1093/infdis/jiae471.
Rachel Emily Levene 1 John DeVincenzo 1 Annie L Conery 1 Alaa Ahmed 1 Yat Sun Or 1 Michael H J Rhodin 1
Affiliations

Affiliation

  • 1 Enanta Pharmaceuticals, Inc, Watertown, Massachusetts, USA.
Abstract

Background: EDP-938 is an oral once-daily RSV nucleoprotein (N) inhibitor with potent Antiviral activity. In a human RSV challenge trial, EDP-938 significantly reduced viral load and symptom severity. During Antiviral development, it is critical to understand the propensity for resistance to develop. In vitro studies of EDP-938 suggest a higher barrier to resistance as compared to RSV fusion inhibitors. We evaluated the development of viral resistance to EDP-938 in a human challenge trial.

Methods: A subset of the 124 participants with RSV Infection were chosen for genetic analysis; 159 nasal wash samples from 48 participants were analyzed using next-generation Sequencing of the N gene of RSV. Of the 48 participant sampled, 37 were from EDP-938-treated and 11 were placebo-treated participants, representing 45% and 26% of the participants, respectively. The effects of treatment-emergent mutations on viral load, EDP-938 efficacy, and viral fitness were evaluated.

Results: Two of the 37 EDP-938-treated participants with samples sequenced had treatment-emergent mutations: N:L139I and N:E112G. From in vitro analysis, N:L139I reduced sensitivity to EDP-938 by approximately 10-fold, while N:E112G had no effect. However, N:L139I was associated with a reduction in viral fitness, suggesting clinical resistance is associated with fitness costs. Neither of these variants were associated with reduced viral clearance.

Conclusions: In human RSV infections treated with EDP-938, emergence of RSV variants with reduced sensitivity to EDP-938 occurred in only 1 participant and was associated with reduced viral fitness. EDP-938's high barrier to resistance highlights its robust mechanism of action.

Clinical trials registration: NCT03691623.

Keywords

EDP-938; N inhibitor; RSV; antiviral; antiviral resistance; challenge trial; clinical trials.

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