Clinical effect and antiviral mechanism of T-705 in treating severe fever with thrombocytopenia syndrome

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作者
Hao Li
Xia-Ming Jiang
Ning Cui
Chun Yuan
Shao-Fei Zhang
Qing-Bin Lu
Zhen-Dong Yang
Qin-Lin Xin
Ya-Bin Song
Xiao-Ai Zhang
Hai-Zhou Liu
Juan Du
Xue-Juan Fan
Lan Yuan
Yi-Mei Yuan
Zhen Wang
Juan Wang
Lan Zhang
Dong-Na Zhang
Zhi-Bo Wang
Ke Dai
Jie-Ying Bai
Zhao-Nian Hao
Hang Fan
Li-Qun Fang
Gengfu Xiao
Yang Yang
Ke Peng
Hong-Quan Wang
Jian-Xiong Li
Lei-Ke Zhang
Wei Liu
机构
[1] State Key Laboratory of Pathogen and Biosecurity,Beijing Institute of Microbiology and Epidemiology
[2] Chinese Academy of Sciences,State Key Laboratory of Virology, Wuhan Institute of Virology, Center for Biosafety Mega
[3] The 154 Hospital,Science
[4] People’s Liberation Army,School of Public Health
[5] Peking University,Institute of Molecular Medicine
[6] Peking University,Tongji Medical College
[7] Huazhong University of Science and Technology,Department of Biostatistics and Emerging Pathogens Institute
[8] University of Florida,Department of Cancer
[9] People’s Liberation Army General Hospital,undefined
[10] Beijing Key Laboratory of Vector Borne and Natural Focus Infectious Diseases,undefined
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摘要
Severe fever with thrombocytopenia syndrome (SFTS) virus (SFTSV) is an emerging tick-borne virus with high fatality and an expanding endemic. Currently, effective anti-SFTSV intervention remains unavailable. Favipiravir (T-705) was recently reported to show in vitro and in animal model antiviral efficacy against SFTSV. Here, we conducted a single-blind, randomized controlled trial to assess the efficacy and safety of T-705 in treating SFTS (Chinese Clinical Trial Registry website, number ChiCTR1900023350). From May to August 2018, laboratory-confirmed SFTS patients were recruited from a designated hospital and randomly assigned to receive oral T-705 in combination with supportive care or supportive care only. Fatal outcome occurred in 9.5% (7/74) of T-705 treated patients and 18.3% (13/71) of controls (odds ratio, 0.466, 95% CI, 0.174–1.247). Cox regression showed a significant reduction in case fatality rate (CFR) with an adjusted hazard ratio of 0.366 (95% CI, 0.142–0.944). Among the low-viral load subgroup (RT-PCR cycle threshold ≥26), T-705 treatment significantly reduced CFR from 11.5 to 1.6% (P = 0.029), while no between-arm difference was observed in the high-viral load subgroup (RT-PCR cycle threshold <26). The T-705-treated group showed shorter viral clearance, lower incidence of hemorrhagic signs, and faster recovery of laboratory abnormities compared with the controls. The in vitro and animal experiments demonstrated that the antiviral efficacies of T-705 were proportionally induced by SFTSV mutation rates, particularly from two transition mutation types. The mutation analyses on T-705-treated serum samples disclosed a partially consistent mutagenesis pattern as those of the in vitro or animal experiments in reducing the SFTSV viral loads, further supporting the anti-SFTSV effect of T-705, especially for the low-viral loads.
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