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Increased survival after gemfibrozil treatment of severe mouse influenza

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Authors

Budd, Alison
Alleva, Lisa
Alsharifi, Mohammed
Koskinen, Aulikki
Smythe, Victoria
Mullbacher, Arno
Wood, Jeffrey
Clark, Ian A

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American Society for Microbiology

Abstract

Gemfibrozil, an agent that inhibits production of proinflammatory cytokines in addition to its clinically useful lipid-lowering activity, increased survival in BALB/c mice that were already ill from infection by influenza virus A/Japan/305/57 (H2N2). Gemfibrozil was administered intraperitoneally once daily from days 4 to 10 after intranasal exposure to the virus. Survival increased from 26% in vehicle-treated mice (n = 50) to 52% in mice given gemfibrozil at 60 mg/kg/day (n = 46) (P = 0.0026). If this principle translates to patients, a drug already approved for human use, albeit by a different route for another purpose, might be adapted relatively fast for use against influenza, conceivably including human infection with a derivative of the avian H5N1 strain.

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Source

Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy

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Restricted until

2037-12-31