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Last week, Detect Diagnostics announced that it received approximately $5.9 million in grants from the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation to support further development of the company’s infrared light-based point-of-care system and assays to detect protein biomarkers of infectious disease. The Visualization by Infrared PEptide Reaction (or VIPER) diagnostic technology can detect bacteria, viruses, and fungi directly from samples and is simple to use, fast, low-cost, sensitive, and portable, making it suitable for low- and middle-income countries, which face a high burden of infectious disease. The grants include specific funding to advance the development of a test to detect tuberculosis.
Last week, the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases and Siga Technologies announced that patients are no longer being enrolled in a clinical trial testing the antiviral drug tecovirimat (or Tpoxx) as a treatment for mpox. The study’s Data Safety and Monitoring Board recommended cessation after the drug did not hasten lesion healing or pain relief in adults with mild to moderate clade 2 mpox at low risk for severe illness, and an additional assessment showed a less than 1 percent chance that the study would demonstrate efficacy if enrollment and follow-up were completed. This news comes amid the ongoing global outbreak of clade 1 mpox and following the 2022 global outbreak of clade 2 mpox. While this trial and another testing Tpoxx for mpox did not show that the drug helped to accelerate lesion healing, before 2022, no treatment candidate had been studied in people with mpox, and this research represents an important step in the ongoing work of finding tools to address mpox.
A recently published study introduces a proof-of-concept for a novel class of antivirals targeting a type of enzyme essential to several families of viruses—which include several pathogens that scientists believe are most likely to cause the next pandemic—, potentially paving the way for a faster and more robust response to future outbreaks. The research team screened hundreds of thousands of compounds, using the ones they discovered to create an optimized drug candidate that was then tested in mice, finding that the candidate could treat COVID-19 on par with Paxlovid, remain effective even if the virus mutated, and cause minimal side effects. The researchers say they need an industry partner before they can test the compound in humans, but they are working on developing compounds that could target other priority viruses that share the targeted enzyme, including RNA viruses like Ebola and dengue, as well as cytosolic-replicating DNA viruses like mpox.