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Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy, April 2003, p. 1233-1240, Vol. 47, No. 4
0066-4804/03/$08.00+0 DOI: 10.1128/AAC.47.4.1233-1240.2003
Copyright © 2003, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
Drug Discovery Program,1 Clinical Immunology Program,4 Departments of Virology,2 Immunology,3 Pathology,7 Chemistry,6 Pharmaceutical Sciences,5 Bioinformatics, Parker Hughes Cancer Center, St. Paul, Minnesota8
Received 3 July 2002/ Returned for modification 20 October 2002/ Accepted 23 January 2003
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1-log decrease in the FIV load of circulating peripheral blood mononuclear cells in five of six FIV-infected cats and no side effects. A 4-week stampidine treatment course with twice-daily administration of hard gelatin capsules containing 25 to 100 mg of stampidine per kg was also very well tolerated by cats at cumulative dose levels as high as 8.4 g/kg and exhibited a dose-dependent antiretroviral effect. One of three cats treated at the 25-mg/kg dose level, three of three cats treated at the 50-mg/kg dose level, and three of three cats treated at the 100-mg/kg dose level (but none of three control cats treated with placebo pills) showed a therapeutic response, as evidenced by a
1-log reduction in the FIV load in peripheral blood mononuclear cells within 2 weeks. The previously documented in vitro and in vivo antiretroviral activity of stampidine against primary clinical human immunodeficiency virus type 1 isolates with genotypic and/or phenotypic NRTI resistance, together with its favorable animal toxicity profile, pharmacokinetics, and in vivo antiretroviral activity in FIV-infected cats, warrants further development of this promising new NRTI compound. |
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In vitro assay of anti-FIV activity of STAMP. Phenotypic FIV drug susceptibility studies were performed by measuring the levels of RT activity in the culture supernatants of T-cell-enriched peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMC) from specific-pathogen-free (SPF) cats after exogenous infection with FIV as previously described (12, 26). T-cell-enriched PBMC were derived from SPF cats by stimulating Ficoll-Hypaque-separated PBMC with concanavalin A for 3 days and culturing them for an additional 2 weeks in interleukin-2 (100 U/ml)-supplemented RPMI culture medium in 24-well tissue culture plates as previously described (26). T-cell-enriched PBMC, at 106/ml, were treated with ZDV (control) or STAMP at the time of FIV inoculation (100 50% tissue culture infective doses). Culture supernatants were harvested at 3-day intervals, on days 9, 12, and 15, and the cells were concurrently resuspended in fresh culture medium containing the indicated concentrations of ZDV or STAMP. Viral replication was monitored by measuring the RT activity levels of the culture supernatants (12). Drug toxicity in these cultures was also monitored by viability and absolute cell count analysis by the trypan blue exclusion method. All cultures were set up in triplicate. Controls included uninfected PBMC (negative control), FIV-infected but untreated PBMC (positive control), and FIV-infected and ZDV-treated PBMC. The results are presented as percentages of the mean control RT titer obtained by using the following formula: percent control replication = 100 x [(mean RT titer of drug-treated culture - mean RT titer of negative control culture)/(mean RT titer of untreated positive control culture - mean RT titer of negative control culture)].
Animals. SPF male or female domestic cats (body weight, 2.9 to 6.2 kg) were obtained from Liberty Research, Inc. (Waverley, N.Y.); Cedar River Laboratories (Mason City, Iowa); or Harlan Sprague-Dawley (Indianapolis, Ind.). All husbandry and experimental contact made with the cats maintained SPF conditions (12-h light-12-h dark photoperiod, 18 to 29°C, 30 to 70% relative humidity). The cats were housed in galvanized gang cages with Plexiglas in a well-ventilated room with no air recirculation. We used FIV-infected cats to simulate the clinical setting in which STAMP will be used. At the time of the present study, all cats were off antiretroviral therapy for 4 weeks and had viral culture evidence of FIV infection in their PBMC. The animal rooms were cleaned daily, and cat litters were changed daily. Cats were provided with dry and wet Purina cat chow and tap water ad libitum. Cats were acclimated to the study room conditions for at least 5 days prior to initiation of the experiment. Animal studies were approved by the Parker Hughes Institute Animal Care and Use Committee, and all animal care procedures conformed to the National Research Council's Guide for the Care and Use of Laboratory Animals (7a). Cats were treated at the University of Florida under a contract service agreement between the Parker Hughes Institute and the University of Florida. Therefore, cat studies were also approved by the University of Florida Animal Care and Use Committee.
Toxicity studies of STAMP in chronically FIV-infected cats. Cats were allowed free access to dry and wet Purina cat chow and tap water throughout the feline toxicity experiments and monitored at least twice daily for morbidity and mortality. Physical examinations were performed at least twice weekly to evaluate the oral cavity and determine the rectal body temperature, heart rate, and respiratory rate. Body weights were determined three times a week. Clinical laboratory testing was done two or three times a month, at weeks -2, -1, 0 (day of first treatment), +2, +4, +6, and +8. Eleven chronically FIV-infected cats were treated orally with STAMP capsules (25 to 100 mg/kg/dose) or placebo capsules twice daily for 28 consecutive days as detailed in Results. Eight chronically FIV-infected cats, including seven cats treated orally with STAMP capsules twice daily (25, 50, or 100 mg/kg/dose) for 28 consecutive days and one untreated control cat, were electively sacrificed at the end of the 8-week observation period of the oral STAMP safety and efficacy study. Six additional cats treated with single bolus doses of STAMP in a single-dose toxicity and efficacy study were electively sacrificed on day 30 after administration of STAMP. Thirty-one tissue types (adrenal gland, brain, cervix, esophagus, gall bladder, heart, large intestine, small intestine, kidney, liver, lung, lymph node, mammary gland, ovary, oviduct, pancreas, parathyroid gland, peripheral nerve, salivary gland, skeletal muscle, skin, spinal cord, spleen, stomach, thymus, thyroid, tongue, trachea, urinary bladder, uterus, and vagina) were collected, fixed in 10% neutral buffered formalin, dehydrated, and embedded in paraffin by routine methods (17). Glass slides with affixed 4- to 5-µm tissue sections were prepared and stained with hematoxylin and eosin. Histopathologic examinations were performed by a veterinary pathologist (B.W.).
STAMP efficacy in chronically FIV-infected cats.
We studied the antiretroviral activity of STAMP in chronically FIV-infected cats. At the indicated times before and after administration of STAMP, the FIV load in PBMC was measured by quantitative virus isolation as previously described (2, 15). In brief, the PBMC from STAMP-treated and placebo-treated cats were cocultured in 25-cm2 tissue culture flasks (total volume, 5 ml) for 3 weeks with 5 x 106 T-cell-enriched PBMC from SPF cats in a total volume of 5 ml at a ratio of 1:1, 1:10, 1:100, 1:1,000, 1:10,000, 1:100,000, or 1:1,000,000. Culture supernatants were harvested and cells were resuspended in fresh culture medium every 3 days. FIV replication was monitored by measuring the levels of RT activity in the culture supernatants at the termination of the cultures (2, 9). RT values were considered positive if they were
10,000 cpm/ml. The FIV load in PBMC is presented as the highest dilution (log x) of infected PBMC from the FIV-infected cats needed to cause detectable FIV infection in uninfected PBMC from healthy SPF cats (VI-RT values) by the above-described coculture technique (16), whereby the undiluted infected PBMC concentration is set at 106 cells/ml. Thus, the FIV load can range from 1, which is equivalent to FIV detection at an undiluted cell concentration of 106/ml, to 6, which is equivalent to FIV detection at a 1:1,000,000 dilution. The FIV load (VI-RT value) was arbitrarily assigned a value of zero when no FIV was detected even at 106 cells/ml. Student t tests (unequal variances) were performed to evaluate the statistical significance of the differences between the viral load (VI-RT) values determined prior to treatment versus those determined 2, 4, and 6 weeks after treatment with STAMP at one of the three dose levels (25, 50, or 100 mg/kg/dose) or with a placebo. To increase the statistical power of the t test, analyses were also performed with the pooled viral load values for all three dose levels. When the standard error for the comparisons was zero, a nonparametric test (Wilcoxon rank sum or Mann-Whitney test) was also performed to determine the effect of STAMP. P values of <0.05 were deemed significant.
Statistical methods for comparison for toxicity-related laboratory parameters. Values for the laboratory parameters were pooled for vehicle controls and STAMP treatments, and for each parameter, differences between means were evaluated for statistical significance by using Student's t test (vehicle versus STAMP treatment, unequal variances, two tailed). The calculations were performed in Excel spreadsheets. To determine significant effects, the P values were adjusted by using the Bonferroni method to control for random variation.
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1 µM. Thus, FIV, for which the 90% inhibitory concentrations (IC90s) are micromolar, appears to be less sensitive to STAMP than is HIV, for which the IC90s are nanomolar (20, 21). Nevertheless, we have previously reported that micromolar concentrations of STAMP can be achieved in FIV-infected cats after oral administration of a single 50- or 100-mg/kg bolus dose of STAMP (5). Hence, these results demonstrated that FIV-infected domestic cats represent an appropriate animal model for further evaluation of the therapeutic potential of STAMP. Therefore, we next set out to evaluate the toxicity and efficacy of STAMP in chronically FIV-infected domestic cats. |
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TABLE 1. In vitro anti-FIV activity of STAMPa
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The single-dose STAMP treatment exhibited potent antiretroviral activity, as evidenced by a transient decrease in the FIV load (VI-RT value) of circulating PBMC at 1 week in five of six cats (Table 2). In addition, we observed an increase in the absolute numbers of CD4+ T cells at 1 to 2 weeks after administration of STAMP (Table 2).
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TABLE 2. Antiretroviral activity of a single oral bolus dose of STAMP in chronically FIV-infected cats
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Four chronically FIV-infected cats were treated with STAMP at 100 mg/kg/dose in hard gelatin capsules twice daily (200 mg/kg/day) for 28 consecutive days (cumulative dose = 5.6 g). Three of these cats had been treated 2 months earlier with either 1.4 g/kg (n = 1) or 2.8 g/kg (n = 2), so that their total cumulative doses were 7.0 g/kg (n = 1) and 8.4 g/kg (n = 2), respectively. In these cats, STAMP caused nausea and vomiting for 2 to 3 days during the first week of treatment. Cat no. 009 vomited only on days 1 and 2; cats no. 035 and 065 vomited on days 1, 7, and 8; and cat no. C3B vomited on days 1 and 4. All cats exhibited a decreased appetite for at least 3 weeks during the 4-week treatment course and transiently lost weight (cat no. 009, 28.6%; cat no. 035, 1.9%; cat no. 065, 18.0%; cat no. C3B, 16.7% [mean ± standard error = 16.3% ± 5.5%]; Table 3) because of malnutrition and/or dehydration during the first 1 to 3 weeks of treatment. Diarrhea was observed in three of the four cats and only on 1 to 3 days of the 4-week treatment period. Otherwise, the treatments were well tolerated and caused no significant toxicity. Blood tests done at 2, 4, 8, and 10 weeks after initiation of therapy showed that STAMP did not cause (i) anemia, neutropenia, lymphopenia, or thrombocytopenia suggestive of hematologic toxicity; (ii) elevations of BUN or creatinine or electrolyte disturbances suggestive of renal toxicity; or (iii) hyperglycemia, hypoglycemia, or hypercholesterolemia suggestive of abnormalities in carbohydrate or fat metabolism. However, all four cats showed an elevation of serum ALT level lasting 1 to 3 weeks without a concomitant elevation in total bilirubin or alkaline phosphatase levels. Selected laboratory data are depicted in Table 3. The average ALT level was 1.8-fold higher than the upper end of the normal range (normal range, 8.3 to 100.0 U/liter; mean ± standard error at 2 weeks = 183.5 ± 77.1 U/liter; P = 0.06). Only one of the four cats had an elevated serum AST level as well. These laboratory results are consistent with hepatotoxicity. Furthermore, serum albumin and total protein levels showed statistically significant decreases at weeks 2 (P = 0.0001 for albumin levels and P = 0.001 for total protein levels) and 4 (P = 0.007 for albumin levels and P = 0.0.002 for total protein levels) consistent with the impaired nutritional status of the cats even though the serum albumin levels were still within the normal range (normal range for albumin, 1.7 to 3.7 g/dl; normal range for total protein, 5.7 to 8.0 g/dl) (Table 3). Three cats (cat ID no. 035 and 065, cumulative dose = 8.4 g/kg; cat ID no. C3B, cumulative dose = 7.0 g/kg) were electively euthanized, and 31 organs were subjected to histopathologic examination. No STAMP-related toxic lesions were found in any of the tissues examined. These results indicate that that STAMP causes transient, mild-to-moderate gastrointestinal and liver toxicity at the 200-mg/kg daily dose level. Thus, 4-weeks of treatment of chronically FIV-infected cats with STAMP is not associated with severe systemic toxicity even at the 200-mg/kg/day dose level and a cumulative dose level as high as 8.4 g/kg.
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TABLE 3. Effects of a 4-week treatment course with orally administered STAMP capsules on health, blood chemistry profiles, and peripheral blood counts of chronically FIV-infected cats
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1-log reduction in the virus burden while on treatment with STAMP at 100 to 200 mg/kg/day.
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FIG. 1. In vivo anti-FIV activity of STAMP in chronically FIV-infected cats. Chronically FIV-infected cats were treated twice daily for 28 consecutive days with STAMP administered orally in hard gelatin capsules. The viral loads of PBMC (bars represent mean viral loads ± the standard deviations) were measured by serial-dilution RT assays as described in Materials and Methods for placebo and STAMP treatment for n replicates.
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TABLE 4. In vivo anti-FIV activity of STAMP in chronically FIV-infected cats
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Our recent studies established the novel NRTI compound STAMP as an anti-HIV agent with potent activity against genotypically and phenotypically NRTI-resistant primary clinical HIV-1 isolates with B and non-B envelope subtypes (21). In a side-by-side comparison against 10 ZDV-sensitive primary clinical HIV-1 isolates, 9 of which had a non-B envelope subtype, STAMP was 100-fold more potent than STV and twice as effective as ZDV (21). STAMP was also active against phenotypically and/or genotypically NRTI-resistant HIV strains and inhibited the replication of 20 ZDV-resistant primary clinical HIV-1 isolates for which the IC50s were in the low nanomolar-to-subnanomolar range (21).
We recently investigated the in vivo pharmacokinetics and metabolism of this promising new anti-HIV agent in mice, rats, cats, and dogs (4, 5, 19). STAMP was found to form two active metabolites, namely, alaninyl-STV-monophosphate (ala-STV-MP) and STV, with favorable pharmacokinetics after systemic administration (4, 5, 19). Notably, plasma concentrations of STAMP and ala-STV-MP >4 logs higher than the corresponding anti-HIV IC50s could be achieved in mice, dogs, and cats at nontoxic dose levels (4, 5). We have further evaluated the clinical potential of STAMP as a new anti-HIV agent by examining its acute, subacute, and chronic toxicity profile in mice and rats (19) and by testing its antiviral activity in a surrogate Hu-PBL-SCID mouse model of human AIDS (22). STAMP was very well tolerated by BALB/c and CD-1 mice, with no detectable acute or subacute toxicity at single intraperitoneal or oral bolus dose levels as high as 500 mg/kg. Notably, daily administration of STAMP intraperitoneally or orally for up to 8 consecutive weeks was not associated with any detectable toxicity at cumulative dose levels as high as 6.4 g/kg. STAMP was very well tolerated by Lewis rats as well, with no toxicity at cumulative dose levels of >1 g/kg (19). Therapeutic micromolar concentrations of STAMP and its active metabolites ala-STV-MP and STV in plasma were rapidly achieved and maintained several hours after intraperitoneal administration of nontoxic 25- to 50-mg/kg bolus doses of STAMP. STAMP exhibited dose-dependent and potent in vivo anti-HIV activity in Hu-PBL-SCID mice against a genotypically and phenotypically NRTI-resistant clinical HIV-1 isolate (BR/92/019; D67N, L214F, T215D, K219Q) at nontoxic dose levels (22).
We have previously reported that the para-bromine group in the phenyl moiety of STAMP contributes to its ability to undergo rapid hydrolysis, yielding the key active metabolite ala-STV-MP in a thymidine kinase-independent fashion (23). Hence, the potency of STAMP against genotypically and phenotypically NRTI-resistant HIV-1 isolates may be due to the rapid kinetics of the generation of its active triphosphate metabolite, yielding much higher inhibitor concentrations at the catalytic site sufficient to overcome the binding restrictions imposed by the NRTI resistance-associated RT mutations. It has also been proposed that aryl phosphate derivatives of STV enter target cells more easily than STV (23), which could also contribute to higher inhibitor concentrations at the catalytic site. It is also possible that the presence of an alaninyl side chain may promote the binding and/or incorporation of the triphosphate metabolite of STAMP. The latter possibility and elucidation of the intracellular metabolic pathways of STAMP will be the subject of our future investigations aimed at elucidating the molecular mechanisms contributing to the remarkable potency of STAMP against ZDV-resistant HIV-1 isolates, which is unprecedented for an NRTI compound.
In the present study, we evaluated the toxicity and antiretroviral activity of STAMP in chronically FIV-infected cats. In accordance with its safety profile in rodent species, a 4-week STAMP treatment course with twice-daily administration of hard gelatin capsules containing STAMP at 25 to 100 mg/kg (50 to 200 mg/kg/day) was very well tolerated by cats at cumulative dose levels as high as 8.4 g/kg. Except for the sporadic occurrence of nausea and vomiting after its administration and elevation of serum ALT levels in some of the cats, STAMP therapy was not associated with any clinical or laboratory evidence of toxicity. No STAMP-related toxic lesions were found in any of the organs from STAMP-treated cats. Notably, a single oral bolus dose of STAMP at the 50- or 100-mg/kg dose level resulted in a transient
1-log decrease in the FIV load of circulating PBMC in five of six FIV-infected cats and no side effects. A 4-week course of treatment with STAMP administered in gelatin capsules twice daily showed a dose-dependent antiretroviral effect in chronically FIV-infected cats. One of three cats treated at the 25-mg/kg dose level, three of three cats treated at the 50-mg/kg dose level, and three of three cats treated at the 100-mg/kg dose level (but none of three control cats treated with placebo pills) showed a therapeutic response, as evidenced by a
1-log reduction in the FIV load in PBMC within 2 weeks. In contrast, the ZDV-lamivudine two-NRTI combination was found to be ineffective in reducing the FIV burden of PBMC in the same model of chronically FIV-infected cats even at dose levels as high as 150 mg/kg/day for each drug, which were associated with substantial side effects (2).
On the basis of its potency, favorable pharmacokinetics, and safety profile, we postulate that STAMP may provide the basis for effective salvage therapies for patients harboring highly drug-resistant strains of HIV-1. The documented in vitro potency of STAMP against primary clinical HIV-1 isolates with genotypic and/or phenotypic NRTI or NNRTI resistance and a non-B envelope subtype, together with its in vivo antiretroviral activity in HIV-infected Hu-PBL SCID mice and FIV-infected cats, warrants further development of this promising new NRTI compound for possible clinical use in both treatment-naive and treatment-experienced HIV-1-infected persons.
We thank Gregory C. Mitcheltree, Hao Chen, Thao Tran, Beth Lisowski, and Heather Wendorf (Parker Hughes Institute) for technical assistance.
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