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Emergence of cross-resistant herpes simplex virus following topical drug therapy in rabbit keratitis.

Author(s): Fardeau C, Langlois M, Mathys B, Rafales P, Nugier F, Godard V, Aymard M, Denis J

Affiliation(s): Unite de Recherches d'Ophtalmologie, INSERM U 86, Hotel-Dieu, Paris, France.

Publication date & source: 1991, Curr Eye Res., 10 Suppl:151-8.

Publication type: Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't

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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