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    No Remdesivir Resistance Observed in the Phase 3 Severe and Moderate COVID-19 SIMPLE Trials

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    viruses-16-00546.pdf (2.243Mb)
    Date
    2024
    Author
    Hedskog, Charlotte
    Spinner, Christoph D.
    Protzer, Ulrike
    Hoffmann, Dieter
    Ko, Chunkyu
    Gottlieb, Robert L.
    Askar, Medhat
    Roestenberg, Meta
    de Vries, Jutte J. C.
    Carbo, Ellen C.
    Martin, Ross
    Li, Jiani
    Han, Dong
    Rodriguez, Lauren
    Parvangada, Aiyappa
    Perry, Jason K.
    Ferrer, Ricard
    Antón, Andrés
    Andrés, Cristina
    Casares, Vanessa
    Günthard, Huldrych F.
    Huber, Michael
    McComsey, Grace A.
    Sadri, Navid
    Aberg, Judith A.
    van Bakel, Harm
    Porter, Danielle P.
    ...show more authors ...show less authors
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    Abstract
    Remdesivir (RDV) is a broad-spectrum nucleotide analog prodrug approved for the treatment of COVID-19 in hospitalized and non-hospitalized patients with clinical benefit demonstrated in multiple Phase 3 trials. Here we present SARS-CoV-2 resistance analyses from the Phase 3 SIMPLE clinical studies evaluating RDV in hospitalized participants with severe or moderate COVID-19 disease. The severe and moderate studies enrolled participants with radiologic evidence of pneumonia and a room-air oxygen saturation of ≤94% or >94%, respectively. Virology sample collection was optional in the study protocols. Sequencing and related viral load data were obtained retrospectively from participants at a subset of study sites with local sequencing capabilities (10 of 183 sites) at timepoints with detectable viral load. Among participants with both baseline and post-baseline sequencing data treated with RDV, emergent Nsp12 substitutions were observed in 4 of 19 (21%) participants in the severe study and none of the 2 participants in the moderate study. The following 5 substitutions emerged: T76I, A526V, A554V, E665K, and C697F. The substitutions T76I, A526V, A554V, and C697F had an EC50 fold change of ≤1.5 relative to the wildtype reference using a SARS-CoV-2 subgenomic replicon system, indicating no significant change in the susceptibility to RDV. The phenotyping of E665K could not be determined due to a lack of replication. These data reveal no evidence of relevant resistance emergence and further confirm the established efficacy profile of RDV with a high resistance barrier in COVID-19 patients.
    DOI/handle
    http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/v16040546
    http://hdl.handle.net/10576/59172
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