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The research, published recently in the journal Nature, suggests that these drugs are more potent when used in combination than individually.
Though they have not yet been tested in clinical trials, the combinations of drugs identified in the study have the potential to become very promising COVID-19 treatments, the researchers said.
”Identifying combinations of antivirals is really important, not only because doing so may increase the drugs’ potency against the coronavirus, but combining drugs also reduces the risk of resistance,” said study principal investigator Sara Cherry, a professor at the University of Pennsylvania, US.
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They screened 18,000 drugs in search of antiviral activity, using live SARS-CoV-2 infection in human respiratory cells, because lungs are the major target for the virus.
The researchers identified 122 drugs that showed antiviral activity and selectivity against the coronavirus, including 16 nucleoside analogs, the largest category of antivirals that are used clinically.
Among the 16 were remdesivir, which is given by injection into a vein and has been approved by the US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) to treat COVID-19, and molnupiravir, an oral pill that was authorised for use in December last year.
Among the 122 drug candidates, the researchers identified a panel of host nucleoside biosynthesis inhibitors, including the experimental drug brequinar.
Nucleoside biosynthesis inhibitors work by blocking the body’s own enzymes from making nucleosides, which prevents the virus from reproducing.
Brequinar is currently being tested in clinical trials as a COVID-19 treatment and as part of a potential combination therapy for some cancers.
Cherry and collaborators hypothesised that combining brequinar with a nucleoside analogue, such as remdesivir or molnupiravir, could work ”synergistically” to create a more potent effect against the virus.
Synergistic interactions occur when the total effect of two or more drugs is greater than the sum of the individual effects of each drug.
”We thought that using these nucleoside analogues while also reducing the levels of the host’s nucleoside building blocks might work together to super destroy the virus,” Cherry said.
”It is really amazing that when you combine them, the virus is completely dead,” she added.
The researchers tested the drugs in lung cells as well as in mice, and found that these combinations were highly effective against multiple strains of the coronavirus, including the Delta variant.
The team is now in the process of testing the drugs against Omicron.
The researchers found that Paxlovid — an oral antiviral that was also recently authorised by the FDA — could be combined with remdesivir or molnupiravir for an ”additive” effect against SARS-CoV-2.
The next step would be for these drug combinations to be tested in clinical trials.
”As new strains of the virus emerge, the need for new treatments will remain critical,” said Mathew Frieman, from the University of Maryland School of Medicine, a co-principal investigator of the study.
”We now know that there are a number of powerful drug combinations that have the potential to alter the trajectory of the virus,” Frieman added.