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A Second-Generation Oral SARS-CoV-2 Main Protease Inhibitor Clinical Candidate for the Treatment of COVID-19.

Charlotte M N AllertonJoel T ArcariLisa M AschenbrennerMelissa AveryBruce M BechleMohammad Amin BehzadiBritton BorasLeanne M BuzonRhonda D CardinNatasha R CatlinAnthony A CarloKaren J CoffmanAlyssa DantonioLi DiHeather EngKathleen A FarleyRose Ann FerreSteven S GernhardtScott A GibsonSamantha E GreasleySiennah R GreenfieldBrett L HurstAmit S KalgutkarEmi KimitoLorraine F LanyonGabrielle H LovettYajing LianWei LiuLuis A Martínez AlsinaStephen NoellR Scott ObachDafydd R OwenNandini C PatelDevendra K RaiMatthew R ReeseHussin A RothanSylvie SakataMatthew F SammonsJean G SathishRaman SharmaClaire M SteppanJamison B TuttlePatrick R VerhoestLiuqing WeiQingyi YangIrina YurgelonisYuao Zhu
Published in: Journal of medicinal chemistry (2024)
Despite the record-breaking discovery, development and approval of vaccines and antiviral therapeutics such as Paxlovid, coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) remained the fourth leading cause of death in the world and third highest in the United States in 2022. Here, we report the discovery and characterization of PF-07817883, a second-generation, orally bioavailable, SARS-CoV-2 main protease inhibitor with improved metabolic stability versus nirmatrelvir, the antiviral component of the ritonavir-boosted therapy Paxlovid. We demonstrate the in vitro pan-human coronavirus antiviral activity and off-target selectivity profile of PF-07817883. PF-07817883 also demonstrated oral efficacy in a mouse-adapted SARS-CoV-2 model at plasma concentrations equivalent to nirmatrelvir. The preclinical in vivo pharmacokinetics and metabolism studies in human matrices are suggestive of improved oral pharmacokinetics for PF-07817883 in humans, relative to nirmatrelvir. In vitro inhibition/induction studies against major human drug metabolizing enzymes/transporters suggest a low potential for perpetrator drug-drug interactions upon single-agent use of PF-07817883.
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