EQUUS

ANTIVIRAL DRUG SHOWS PROMISE AGAINST EHV- 1

-

A new study shows that the antiviral drug valacyclov­ir can significan­tly reduce the severity of neurologic­al problems brought on by equine herpesviru­s type 1 (EHV-1) and may limit the spread of the virus to other horses.

One of nine types of equine herpesviru­s, EHV-1 infection typically causes respirator­y illness in young horses and abortions in pregnant mares. In some cases, the virus leads to muscle weakness and incoordina­tion, a condition called equine herpesviru­s myeloencep­halopathy (EHM). EHV-1 is also highly contagious, and outbreaks in a barn can last for weeks.

Researcher­s at Oklahoma State University recent investigat­ed the efficacy of valacyclov­ir, a medication developed to treat herpes infections in people, in treating EHM. “Valacyclov­ir is a prodrug for acyclovir, meaning that the body converts valacyclov­ir to its active form, which is acyclovir,” explains Lara Maxwell, DVM, PhD. “Acyclovir is transporte­d to the inside of the horse’s cells, which is where the virus replicates. In the cell, acyclovir is modified by viral and cellular enzymes to an active form that interferes with DNA synthesis. Therefore, acyclovir works by inhibiting viral replicatio­n. It cannot actually kill the virus, but it reduces viral replicatio­n and so buys time for the horse’s immune system to more directly attack the virus and virally infected cells.”

Acyclovir and valacyclov­ir have been used to treat other viral diseases in horses, including equine multinodul­ar

EHV-1 infection typically causes respirator­y illness in young horses and abortions in pregnant mares.

pulmonary fibrosis (EMPF) associated with EHV-5.

For the study, the researcher­s selected 18 healthy mares aged 20 or older---a cohort known to be particular­ly susceptibl­e to EHM ---and inoculated them with EHV-1. The mares were divided into three groups: The first began receiving valacyclov­ir one day before being exposed to EHV-1, the second group was started on the drug only after developing a fever, indicating infection, at one to two days after inoculatio­n, and the third group was given a placebo treatment to serve as controls. In the first phase of the study, which involved half the horses, the valacyclov­ir treatments were continued for one week. In the second phase of the study, using the remaining horses, valacyclov­ir treatments continued for two weeks.

Throughout the study period, researcher­s monitored each horse’s temperatur­e twice daily, and a specialist performed daily neurologic­al evaluation­s, documentin­g any observable ataxia (lack of muscle coordinati­on).

The researcher­s found that treatment with valacyclov­ir did not reduce the likelihood that neurologic­al signs would develop but it did seem to have a positive effect: “Valacyclov­ir significan­tly reduced severity of neurologic­al disease,” explains Maxwell. Horses treated prior to being inoculated with EHV-1 showed the least severe ataxia, suggesting a benefit to treating all horses in a barn during an outbreak, not just those already showing clinical signs.

Maxwell says her findings indicate that the earlier treatment with the antiviral drug is started, the better: “Valacyclov­ir therapy should be administer­ed early for the best chance of sparing the horse from debilitati­ng disease,” she says. “Once the virus has impacted the central nervous system [CNS] and caused ataxia and other neurologic­al signs, damage to the neurons has occurred, and that may or may not be reversible in that individual horse.”

In addition to drawing blood from horses daily to determine the circulatin­g levels of virus (viremia), the researcher­s swabbed their nasal secretions throughout the study period to monitor viral shedding, which is how EHV spreads from horse to horse.

“Although shedding is from the nose, EHV-1 moves around the body through the blood,” says Maxwell. “It is theorized that the virus reaches the horse’s CNS by moving from the nose to the brain and spinal cord via the blood. Therefore, we are interested in viremia as a marker of how much EHV-1 could reach the CNS through the blood.”

The data revealed that horses started on valacyclov­ir prior to the developmen­t of fever had lower levels of nasal shedding and viremia. Although this alone is not proof that the drug could help curb outbreaks, the researcher­s believe it supports the idea of early treatment: “It would be a logical expectatio­n that lower viral shedding in treated horses would decrease the chance of infecting other horses,” says Maxwell. “However, we don’t know what viral dose is necessary for infection and whether reduction (but not eliminatio­n) of shedding would really decrease the chance of infecting other horses.”

Maxwell says that ongoing studies are exploring other treatments that may be more effective later in the course of EHV-1 infection, but based on this study, “I’d recommend that any horse documented to have an active EHV-1 infection, or recent exposure to an infected horse, could potentiall­y benefit from early treatment with valacyclov­ir. However, valacyclov­ir is most likely to be efficaciou­s if therapy begins well before the developmen­t of neurologic­al signs.”

The researcher­s found that treatment with valacyclov­ir did not make it less likely that horses infected with EHV-1 would develop neurologic­al signs, but it did reduce the severity of their impairment.

 ??  ?? EQUINE HERPESVIRU­S
EQUINE HERPESVIRU­S
 ??  ??
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States