@article{6eb24467d9b647d796b4736e00291216,
title = "Novel UL97 drug resistance mutations identified at baseline in a clinical trial of maribavir for resistant or refractory cytomegalovirus infection",
abstract = "In a Phase 2 clinical trial, 120 subjects with cytomegalovirus (CMV) infection refractory or resistant to standard therapy were randomized equally to 3 doses of oral maribavir treatment, and 70% achieved undetectable plasma CMV DNA within 12 weeks. At study entry, standard diagnostic UL97 genotyping was available for 71 subjects, with 60 (85%) revealing well-characterized ganciclovir resistance mutations that did not preclude a therapeutic response to maribavir. Central laboratory testing of a range of UL97 codons (288–468) not fully covered by standard genotyping was done on 93 subjects at baseline. This detected no previously known maribavir resistance mutations, but identified atypical mutations in 3 subjects, including a P-loop substitution F342Y, and ATP-binding region substitutions K359E/Q. By recombinant phenotyping, K359E and K359Q each conferred a nearly 4-fold increased ganciclovir 50% inhibitory concentration (EC50) without maribavir resistance, whereas F342Y conferred a 6-fold increased ganciclovir EC50 and a 4.5-fold increased maribavir EC50. The subject with F342Y detected at baseline did not achieve plasma CMV DNA clearance after 12 weeks of maribavir therapy and later developed an additional UL97 substitution H411Y known to confer 12- to 20-fold increased MBV EC50 by itself. The combination of F342Y and H411Y was shown to increase the maribavir EC50 by 56-fold. Diagnostic genotyping of UL97 should be expanded to cover the ATP-binding region beginning at codon 335 to enable the detection of atypical resistance mutations and further correlation of their clinical significance.",
keywords = "Antiviral drug resistance, Cross-resistance, Cytomegalovirus, Ganciclovir, Maribavir",
author = "Sunwen Chou and Jingyang Wu and Kening Song and Tien Bo",
note = "Funding Information: Role of the funding source: The study 202 was funded by ViroPharma/Shire Development LLC, USA.* Shire International GmbH* provided funding to Caudex Health (Oxford, UK) for support in managing this manuscript. Although employees of Shire were involved in the design, collection, analysis, interpretation, and fact-checking of information, the content of this manuscript, the interpretation of the data, and the decision to submit the manuscript for publication was made by the authors independently.L. Elizabeth Satterwhite and Ronald J. Ercolani provided technical assistance. This work was supported by the National Institutes of Health, USA (grant R01-AI116635) and a Collaborative Research and Development Agreement between Department of Veterans Affairs, USA and Shire, a Takeda Company, USA including use of VA resources and facilities. Prasant Mohanty of Shire* provided additional statistical support. Anna Wijatyk and Shailesh Chavan of Shire* contributed to previous development and presentation of this research. Editorial assistance limited to formatting and proofreading, and coordination and collation of comments, was provided by Caudex Health, funded by Shire International GmbH.* Funding Information: L. Elizabeth Satterwhite and Ronald J. Ercolani provided technical assistance. This work was supported by the National Institutes of Health, USA (grant R01-AI116635 ) and a Collaborative Research and Development Agreement between Department of Veterans Affairs, USA and Shire, a Takeda Company, USA including use of VA resources and facilities. Prasant Mohanty of Shire* provided additional statistical support. Anna Wijatyk and Shailesh Chavan of Shire* contributed to previous development and presentation of this research. Editorial assistance limited to formatting and proofreading, and coordination and collation of comments, was provided by Caudex Health, funded by Shire International GmbH.* Funding Information: Role of the funding source: The study 202 was funded by ViroPharma/Shire Development LLC, USA .* Shire International GmbH* provided funding to Caudex Health (Oxford, UK) for support in managing this manuscript. Although employees of Shire were involved in the design, collection, analysis, interpretation, and fact-checking of information, the content of this manuscript, the interpretation of the data, and the decision to submit the manuscript for publication was made by the authors independently. Publisher Copyright: {\textcopyright} 2019 Elsevier B.V.",
year = "2019",
month = dec,
doi = "10.1016/j.antiviral.2019.104616",
language = "English (US)",
volume = "172",
journal = "Antiviral Research",
issn = "0166-3542",
publisher = "Elsevier",
}