Treating patient, not virus, could beat many flu strains at once
06:23
A radical new approach to
fighting influenza could not only save countless lives each year, it
could pave the way for other drugs in the future. Called Vasculotide, it
represents a paradigm shift in the thinking of fighting deadly viruses.
Rather than trying to kill the virus itself, or stop it from infecting
the body, Vasculotide simply stops the infected body from leaking fluid
into the lungs. That’s all it does — yet, in testing, it was able to
save 80% of two types of mice from three different
and normally completely fatal strains of the flu.
This is possible
because, while Vasculotide completely stops the virus’s ability to
enact its single most deadly symptom, the drug does not depress the
natural immune system in the process. Our immune systems are almost
always capable of killing off invaders, but not always of doing so
before the virus kills the host. By simply fighting the onset of
respiratory problems like pneumonia, the drugs keeps the host alive
so the immune system has the time it needs to beat the virus.
This
might not sound like such a big deal; after all, toughening the body
against a virus is not a conceptually new idea, and could even
theoretically encompass taking vitamins while sick. However, the ability
to specifically and reliably prevent a downstream effect of
disease — that is to say, the end of the chain reaction begun by
the virus — could let it be uniquely generalizable. The tests published
this week found success fighting the 2009 Swine Flu pandemic strain,
among others.
As mentioned, the drug was tested
with multiple species of mice and multiple strains of the flu. All
mammalian blood vessels share this basic process of fluid transfer, and
the vast majority of flu viruses kill at least some of the infected via
respiratory failure, so by modifying that process Vasculotide could
protect a wide array of animals — say, humans — from a wide array of
diseases, and not just from within the influenza family.
Another
great advantage to treating the symptom in this way is that the drug can
be administered well after infection, and even after the onset of
symptoms, and still be effective. This is said to “rescue” the mice from
infection, something even modern anti-viral medication like Tamiflu
can’t do with any regularity. And unlike Tamiflu and other major
compounds, this one can be mass-produced at an affordable price, which
is important when the areas most tormented by influenza are also the
areas with the least ability to pay for expensive treatments.
Best of all, since the drug focuses on effects, it could be effective even against drug-resistant strains of a disease. It’s certainly possible that a virus would evolve around Vasculotide’s effect — the lack of respiratory leaking lowers its transmissibility to hosts, lowering its evolutionary fitness — but such an evolved response would be independent of many other sorts of resistances. A resistance to this treatment would have to come in the form of a modified form of lung-attack, rather than a specific resistance to the Vasculotide molecules themselves.
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