TL;DR: The severe combined immunodeficient mouse MCMV infection is an important new model that will permit chemotherapy regimens to be studied over several months, and the relative therapeutic index of HPMPC was 50-fold greater than that of ganciclovir.
Abstract: Severe combined immunodeficient (SCID) mice were found to be highly susceptible to murine cytomegalovirus (MCMV) infection. Treatment of infected mice with ganciclovir (12.5, 25, and 50 mg/kg of body weight for 10 days) starting 24 h after virus challenge resulted in delays in death by 2 to 8 days, and no animals survived the infection. (S)-1-[3-Hydroxy-2-(phosphonylmethoxy)propyl]cytosine (HPMPC) was much more potent, with doses of 1, 3.2, and 10 mg/kg/day (for 10 days) increasing the mean survival time by 15 to 30 days. Twenty-day treatments with HPMPC starting 5 days after virus inoculation increased the mean survival time by 24 to 32 days, with once-weekly (50-mg/kg) treatments being equivalent to daily (10-mg/kg) treatments. Delays in the development of liver, lung, and spleen virus titers in ganciclovir- and HPMPC-treated groups correlated with extensions in the mean survival times relative to the survival times of the placebo controls. The two compounds were approximately equally toxic to uninfected BALB/c mice treated for 10 days, causing 80 to 100% mortality after a dose of 150 mg/kg and 0% mortality after a dose of 75 mg/kg. Thus, the relative therapeutic index of HPMPC was 50-fold greater than that of ganciclovir. Recombinant alpha interferon delta 4 alpha 1/alpha 2 (1 x 10(4) and 5 x 10(4) units per mouse per day) and bropirimine (100 and 300 mg/kg/day) provided no protection from the lethal MCMV infection. The severe combined immunodeficient mouse MCMV infection is an important new model that will permit chemotherapy regimens to be studied over several months.
TL;DR: In this paper, the effects of 75 compounds, some of which were considered immunomodulators in their primary mechanism of activity, were studied in the Punta Toro virus (PTV) infection model.
TL;DR: A high rate of complete response was noted at higher dose levels among patients who had failed prior therapy with bacillus Calmette-Guerin, and further clinical trials of bropirimine in bladder cancer appear warranted.
TL;DR: Oral bropirimine can induce remission of bladder CIS with acceptable toxicity at 3.0 g/day and may have the potential to replace BCG as front-line therapy because of its ease of administration.
TL;DR: Comparative dissolution studies revealed that the solid complex exhibited a markedly faster dissolution rate compared to the PEG 6000 solid dispersions and physical mixtures in water and phosphate buffer (pH 7.4), but TLC investigations proved that this decrease in the release rate was not due to drug degradation.