Establishment of multicenter COVID-19 therapeutics preclinical test system in Republic of Korea

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Title
Establishment of multicenter COVID-19 therapeutics preclinical test system in Republic of Korea
Author(s)
H Noh; S Yoon; S H Kim; J Kim; J S Seo; J J Kim; I H Park; J Oh; J Y Bae; G E Lee; S J Woo; S M Seo; N W Kim; Y W Lee; H J Jang; S M Hong; S H An; K S Lyoo; M Yeom; H Lee; B Jung; Sun Woo Yoon; Jung-Ah KangDae Gwin Jeong; D Song; J S Shin; J W Yun; K T Nam; J K Seong
Bibliographic Citation
Pulmonary Pharmacology & Therapeutics, vol. 80, pp. 102189-102189
Publication Year
2023
Abstract
Throughout the recent COVID-19 pandemic, South Korea led national efforts to develop vaccines and therapeutics for SARS-CoV-2. The project proceeded as follows: 1) evaluation system setup (including Animal Biosafety Level 3 (ABSL3) facility alliance, standardized nonclinical evaluation protocol, and laboratory information management system), 2) application (including committee review and selection), and 3) evaluation (including expert judgment and reporting). After receiving 101 applications, the selection committee reviewed pharmacokinetics, toxicity, and efficacy data and selected 32 final candidates. In the nonclinical efficacy test, we used golden Syrian hamsters and human angiotensin-converting enzyme 2 transgenic mice under a cytokeratin 18 promoter to evaluate mortality, clinical signs, body weight, viral titer, neutralizing antibody presence, and histopathology. These data indicated eight new drugs and one repositioned drug having significant efficacy for COVID-19. Three vaccine and four antiviral drugs exerted significant protective activities against SARS-CoV-2 pathogenesis. Additionally, two anti-inflammatory drugs showed therapeutic effects on lung lesions and weight loss through their mechanism of action but did not affect viral replication. Along with systematic verification of COVID-19 animal models through large-scale studies, our findings suggest that ABSL3 multicenter alliance and nonclinical evaluation protocol standardization can promote reliable efficacy testing against COVID-19, thus expediting medical product development.
Keyword
SARS-CoV-2COVID-19NonclinicalhACE2 mouseGolden Syrian hamster
ISSN
1094-5539
Publisher
Elsevier
Full Text Link
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.pupt.2023.102189
Type
Article
Appears in Collections:
Division of Research on National Challenges > Bionanotechnology Research Center > 1. Journal Articles
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