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Emergence of cross-resistant herpes simplex virus following topical drug therapy in rabbit keratitis
13
Citations
10
References
1991
Year
DermatologyAntiviral DrugDrug ResistanceHerpes Simplex VirusAntiviral Drug DevelopmentTopical DrugSkin PharmacologyHerpes Simplex Virus VaccinesHsv IsolatesAllergyOphthalmologyVirologyRabbit KeratitisPharmacologyTopical Drug TherapyAntiviral ResponseAntiviral TherapyHerpesvirusesWound HealingMedicine
The acquisition of drug resistance in vivo was investigated by 7 serial passages (from P0 to P7) of herpes simplex virus (HSV-1) in rabbit cornea treated with either IUdR (idoxuridine), IDC (idoxycytidine), ACV (acyclovir), TFT (trifluridine), or Ara A (adenine arabinoside). Therapeutic failure was acquired gradually: at P3 for IUdR, at P4 for ACV and at P5 for TFT. At P7, viral thymidine kinase (TK) activity was reduced to 5.6% of the parental strain for IUdR, to 7.5% for ACV and to 4.6% for TFT treatment. No signs of clinical unresponsiveness occurred with IDC or Ara A. The in vitro determination of antiviral drug sensitivity performed by the dye-uptake assay on HSV isolates at each passage showed a correlation between the increase in the 50% effective dose (ED50) and the increase of ulcer area grade at each passage under antiviral drug (p less than 0.1). Both IUdR- and TFT-resistant HSV1 developed cross-resistances to TK dependent drugs. However ACV-resistant HSV1 did not show cross-resistance to other antiviral TK dependent drugs. The acquisition of the cross-resistances is discussed, and the practical implications in case of therapeutic failures are suggested.
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