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Featured researches published by Stephanie Curry.


Journal of Hepatology | 2013

Antiviral activity of boceprevir monotherapy in treatment-naive subjects with chronic hepatitis C genotype 2/3

Marcelo Silva; Michelle Treitel; Donald J. Graham; Stephanie Curry; Maria J. Frontera; Patricia McMonagle; Samir Gupta; Eric Hughes; Robert Chase; Fred Lahser; Richard J. Barnard; Anita Y. M. Howe; John A. Howe

BACKGROUND & AIMS To examine the antiviral activity of boceprevir, a hepatitis C virus (HCV) protease inhibitor, in HCV genotype (G) 2/3-infected patients. METHODS We assessed boceprevir and telaprevir activity against an HCV G2 and G3 isolates enzyme panel, in replicon, and in phenotypic cell-based assays. Additionally, a phase I study evaluated the antiviral activity of boceprevir monotherapy (200mg BID, 400mg BID, or 400mg TID) vs. placebo for 14 days in HCV G2/3 treatment-naive patients. RESULTS Boceprevir and telaprevir similarly inhibited G1 and G2 NS3/4A enzymes and replication in G1 and G2 replicon and cell-based assays. However, telaprevir demonstrated lower potency than boceprevir against HCV G3a enzyme (Ki=75 nM vs. 17 nM), in the G3a replicon assay (EC₅₀=953 nM vs. 159 nM), and against HCV G3a NS3 isolates (IC₅₀=3312 nM vs. 803 nM) in the cell-based assay. In HCV G2/3-infected patients, boceprevir (400 mg TID) resulted in a maximum mean decrease in HCV RNA of -1.60 log vs. -0.21 log with placebo. CONCLUSIONS In vitro, boceprevir is more active than telaprevir against the HCV G3 NS3/4A enzyme in cell-based and biochemical assays and against G3 isolates in replicon assays. In HCV G2/3-infected treatment-naive patients, decreases in HCV RNA levels with boceprevir (400 mg TID) were comparable to those observed with the same dose in HCV treatment-experienced G1-infected patients.


Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy | 2015

Susceptibilities of Genotype 1a, 1b, and 3 Hepatitis C Virus Variants to the NS5A Inhibitor Elbasvir

Rong Liu; Stephanie Curry; Patricia McMonagle; Wendy W. Yeh; Steven W. Ludmerer; Patricia Jumes; William L. Marshall; Stephanie Kong; Paul Ingravallo; Stuart Black; Irene Pak; Mark J. DiNubile; Anita Y. M. Howe

ABSTRACT Elbasvir is an investigational NS5A inhibitor with in vitro activity against multiple HCV genotypes. Antiviral activity of elbasvir was measured in replicons derived from wild-type or resistant variants of genotypes 1a, 1b, and 3. The barrier to resistance was assessed by the number of resistant colonies selected by exposure to various elbasvir concentrations. In a phase 1b dose-escalating study, virologic responses were determined in 48 noncirrhotic adult men with chronic genotype 1 or 3 infections randomized to placebo or elbasvir from 5 to 50 mg (genotype 1) or 10 to 100 mg (genotype 3) once daily for 5 days. The NS5A gene was sequenced from plasma specimens obtained before, during, and after treatment. Elbasvir suppressed the emergence of resistance-associated variants (RAVs) in vitro in a dose-dependent manner. Variants selected by exposure to high elbasvir concentrations typically encoded multiple amino acid substitutions (most commonly involving loci 30, 31, and 93), conferring high-level elbasvir resistance. In the monotherapy study, patients with genotype 1b had greater reductions in HCV RNA levels than patients with genotype 1a at all elbasvir doses; responses in patients with genotype 3 were generally less pronounced than for genotype 1, particularly at lower elbasvir doses. M28T, Q30R, L31V, and Y93H in genotype 1a, L31V and Y93H in genotype 1b, and A30K, L31F, and Y93H in genotype 3 were the predominant RAVs selected by elbasvir monotherapy. Virologic findings in patients were consistent with the preclinical observations. NS5A-RAVs emerged most often at amino acid positions 28, 30, 31, and 93 in both the laboratory and clinical trial. (The MK-8742 P002 trial has been registered at ClinicalTrials.gov under identifier NCT01532973.)


Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy | 2016

The Combination of Grazoprevir, a Hepatitis C Virus (HCV) NS3/4A Protease Inhibitor, and Elbasvir, an HCV NS5A Inhibitor, Demonstrates a High Genetic Barrier to Resistance in HCV Genotype 1a Replicons

Frederick C. Lahser; Karin Bystol; Stephanie Curry; Patricia McMonagle; Ellen Xia; Paul Ingravallo; Robert Chase; Rong Liu; Todd A. Black; Daria J. Hazuda; Anita Y. M. Howe; Ernest Asante-Appiah

ABSTRACT The selection of resistance-associated variants (RAVs) against single agents administered to patients chronically infected with hepatitis C virus (HCV) necessitates that direct-acting antiviral agents (DAAs) targeting multiple viral proteins be developed to overcome failure resulting from emergence of resistance. The combination of grazoprevir (formerly MK-5172), an NS3/4A protease inhibitor, and elbasvir (formerly MK-8742), an NS5A inhibitor, was therefore studied in genotype 1a (GT1a) replicon cells. Both compounds were independently highly potent in GT1a wild-type replicon cells, with 90% effective concentration (EC90) values of 0.9 nM and 0.006 nM for grazoprevir and elbasvir, respectively. No cross-resistance was observed when clinically relevant NS5A and NS3 RAVs were profiled against grazoprevir and elbasvir, respectively. Kinetic analyses of HCV RNA reduction over 14 days showed that grazoprevir and elbasvir inhibited prototypic NS5A Y93H and NS3 R155K RAVs, respectively, with kinetics comparable to those for the wild-type GT1a replicon. In combination, grazoprevir and elbasvir interacted additively in GT1a replicon cells. Colony formation assays with a 10-fold multiple of the EC90 values of the grazoprevir-elbasvir inhibitor combination suppressed emergence of resistant colonies, compared to a 100-fold multiple for the independent agents. The selected resistant colonies with the combination harbored RAVs that required two or more nucleotide changes in the codons. Mutations in the cognate gene caused greater potency losses for elbasvir than for grazoprevir. Replicons bearing RAVs identified from resistant colonies showed reduced fitness for several cell lines and may contribute to the activity of the combination. These studies demonstrate that the combination of grazoprevir and elbasvir exerts a potent effect on HCV RNA replication and presents a high genetic barrier to resistance. The combination of grazoprevir and elbasvir is currently approved for chronic HCV infection.


Open Forum Infectious Diseases | 2014

Clinical Implications of Detectable Baseline Hepatitis C Virus-Genotype 1 NS3/4A-Protease Variants on the Efficacy of Boceprevir Combined With Peginterferon/Ribavirin

John A. Howe; Jianmin Long; Stuart Black; Robert Chase; Patricia McMonagle; Stephanie Curry; Seth Thompson; Mark J. DiNubile; Anita Y. M. Howe

Background  We analyzed the impact of pretreatment variants conferring boceprevir-resistance on sustained virologic response (SVR) rates achieved with boceprevir plus peginterferon-α/ribavirin (P/R) for hepatitis C virus (HCV)-genotype-1 infection. Methods  NS3-protease-polymorphisms emerging coincident with virologic failure on boceprevir/P/R regimens were identified as resistance-associated variants (RAVs). Baseline samples pooled from 6 phase II or phase III clinical trials were analyzed for RAVs by population sequencing. Interferon (IFN)-responsiveness was predefined as >1 log reduction in HCV-RNA level during the initial 4-week lead-in treatment with P/R before boceprevir was added. The effective boceprevir-concentration inhibiting RAV growth by 50% (EC50) was determined using a replicon assay relative to the wild-type referent. Results  Sequencing was performed in 2241 of 2353 patients (95.2%) treated with boceprevir. At baseline, RAVs were detected in 178 patients (7.9%), including 153 of 1498 genotype-1a infections (10.2%) and 25 of 742 genotype-1b infections (3.4%) (relative risk, 3.03; 95% confidence interval [CI], [2.01, 4.58]). For IFN-responders, SVR24 (SVR assessed 24 weeks after discontinuation of all study medications) rates were 78% and 76% with or without RAVs detected at baseline, respectively. For the 510 poor IFN-responders, SVR24 rates were 8 of 36 subjects (22.2% [11.7%, 38.1%]) when baseline RAVs were detected vs 174 of 474 subjects (36.7% [32.5%, 41.1%]) when baseline RAVs were not detected (relative likelihood of SVR24 [95% CI], 0.61 [0.32, 1.05]). Sustained virologic response was achieved in 7 of 8 (87.5%) IFN-nonresponders with baseline variants exhibiting ≤2-fold increased EC50 for boceprevir in a replicon assay, whereas only 1 of 15 (7%) IFN-nonresponders with baseline RAVs associated with ≥3-fold increased EC50 achieved SVR. Conclusions  Baseline protease-variants appear to negatively impact SVR rates for boceprevir/P/R regimens only when associated with decreased boceprevir susceptibility in vitro after a poor IFN-response during the lead-in period.


Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy | 2017

Antiviral Activity and Resistance Analysis of NS3/4A Protease Inhibitor Grazoprevir and NS5A Inhibitor Elbasvir in Hepatitis C Virus GT4 Replicons

Ernest Asante-Appiah; Stephanie Curry; Patricia McMonagle; Paul Ingravallo; Robert Chase; David Nickle; Ping Qiu; Anita Y. M. Howe; Frederick Lahser

ABSTRACT Although genotype 4 (GT4)-infected patients represent a minor overall percentage of the global hepatitis C virus (HCV)-infected population, the high prevalence of the genotype in specific geographic regions coupled with substantial sequence diversity makes it an important genotype to study for antiviral drug discovery and development. We evaluated two direct-acting antiviral agents—grazoprevir, an HCV NS3/4A protease inhibitor, and elbasvir, an HCV NS5A inhibitor—in GT4 replicons prior to clinical studies in this genotype. Following a bioinformatics analysis of available GT4 sequences, a set of replicons bearing representative GT4 clinical isolates was generated. For grazoprevir, the 50% effective concentration (EC50) against the replicon bearing the reference GT4a (ED43) NS3 protease and NS4A was 0.7 nM. The median EC50 for grazoprevir against chimeric replicons encoding NS3/4A sequences from GT4 clinical isolates was 0.2 nM (range, 0.11 to 0.33 nM; n = 5). The difficulty in establishing replicons bearing NS3/4A resistance-associated substitutions was substantially overcome with the identification of a G162R adaptive substitution in NS3. Single NS3 substitutions D168A/V identified from de novo resistance selection studies reduced grazoprevir antiviral activity by 137- and 47-fold, respectively, in the background of the G162R replicon. For elbasvir, the EC50 against the replicon bearing the reference full-length GT4a (ED43) NS5A gene was 0.0002 nM. The median EC50 for elbasvir against chimeric replicons bearing clinical isolates from GT4 was 0.0007 nM (range, 0.0002 to 34 nM; n = 14). De novo resistance selection studies in GT4 demonstrated a high propensity to suppress the emergence of amino acid substitutions that confer high-potency reductions to elbasvir. Phenotypic characterization of the NS5A amino acid substitutions identified (L30F, L30S, M31V, and Y93H) indicated that they conferred 15-, 4-, 2.5-, and 7.5-fold potency losses, respectively, to elbasvir. The activity profiles of grazoprevir and elbasvir supported the testing of the direct-acting antivirals in clinical studies.


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2016

Aryl or heteroaryl substituted aminal derivatives of HCV NS5A inhibitor MK-8742.

Wensheng Yu; Craig A. Coburn; Anilkumar G. Nair; Michael Wong; Stuart B. Rosenblum; Guowei Zhou; Michael P. Dwyer; Ling Tong; Bin Hu; Bin Zhong; Jinglai Hao; Tao Ji; Shuai Zan; Seong Heon Kim; Qingbei Zeng; Oleg Selyutin; Lei Chen; Frédéric Massé; Sony Agrawal; Rong Liu; Ellen Xia; Ying Zhai; Stephanie Curry; Patricia McMonagle; Paul Ingravallo; Ernest Asante-Appiah; Mingxiang Lin; Joseph A. Kozlowski

Herein we describe our research efforts around the aryl and heteroaryl substitutions at the aminal carbon of the tetracyclic indole-based HCV NS5A inhibitor MK-8742. A series of potent NS5A inhibitors are described, such as compounds 45-47, 54, 56, and 65, which showed improved potency against clinically relevant and resistance associated HCV variants. The improved potency profiles of these compounds demonstrated an SAR that can improve the potency against GT2b, GT1a Y93H, and GT1a L31V altogether, which was unprecedented in our previous efforts in NS5A inhibition.


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2012

5-Benzothiazole substituted pyrimidine derivatives as HCV replication (replicase) inhibitors

Ashok Arasappan; Frank Bennett; Vinay Girijavallabhan; Yuhua Huang; Regina Huelgas; Carmen Alvarez; Lei Chen; Stephen Gavalas; Seong-Heon Kim; Aneta Kosinski; Patrick Pinto; Razia Rizvi; Randall R. Rossman; Bandarpalle B. Shankar; Ling Tong; Francisco Velazquez; Srikanth Venkatraman; Vishal Verma; Joseph A. Kozlowski; Neng-Yang Shih; John J. Piwinski; Malcolm Maccoss; Cecil D. Kwong; Jeremy L. Clark; Anita T. Fowler; Feng Geng; Hollis S. Kezar; Abhijit Roychowdhury; Robert C. Reynolds; Joseph A. Maddry

Based on a previously identified HCV replication (replicase) inhibitor 1, SAR efforts were conducted around the pyrimidine core to improve the potency and pharmacokinetic profile of the inhibitors. A benzothiazole moiety was found to be the optimal substituent at the pyrimidine 5-position. Due to potential reactivity concern, the 4-chloro residue was replaced by a methyl group with some loss in potency and enhanced rat in vivo profile. Extensive investigations at the C-2 position resulted in identification of compound 16 that demonstrated very good replicon potency, selectivity and rodent plasma/target organ concentration. Inhibitor 16 also demonstrated good plasma levels and oral bioavailability in dogs, while monkey exposure was rather low. Chemistry optimization towards a practical route to install the benzothiazole moiety resulted in an efficient direct C-H arylation protocol.


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2016

Substituted tetracyclic indole core derivatives of HCV NS5A inhibitor MK-8742

Wensheng Yu; Guowei Zhou; Craig A. Coburn; Qingbei Zeng; Ling Tong; Michael P. Dwyer; Bin Hu; Bin Zhong; Jinglai Hao; Tao Ji; Shuai Zan; Lei Chen; Robert Mazzola; Jae-Hun Kim; Deyou Sha; Oleg Selyutin; Stuart B. Rosenblum; Brian J. Lavey; Anilkumar G. Nair; Seong Heon Kim; Kerry Keertikar; Laura Rokosz; Sony Agrawal; Rong Liu; Ellen Xia; Ying Zhai; Stephanie Curry; Patricia McMonagle; Paul Ingravallo; Ernest Asante-Appiah

As part of an ongoing effort in NS5A inhibition at Merck we now describe our efforts for introducing substitution around the tetracyclic indole core of MK-8742. Fluoro substitution on the core combined with the fluoro substitutions on the proline ring improved the potency against GT1a Y93H significantly. However, no improvement on GT2b potency was achieved. Limiting the fluoro substitution to C-1 of the tetracyclic indole core had a positive impact on the potency against the resistance associated variants, such as GT1a Y93H and GT2b, and the PK profile as well. Compounds, such as 62, with reduced potency shifts between wild type GT1a to GT2b, GT1a Y93H, and GT1a L31V were identified.


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2016

Structure–activity relationships of proline modifications around the tetracyclic-indole class of NS5A inhibitors

Ling Tong; Wensheng Yu; Craig A. Coburn; Lei Chen; Oleg Selyutin; Qingbei Zeng; Michael P. Dwyer; Anilkumar G. Nair; Bandarpalle B. Shankar; Seong Heon Kim; De-Yi Yang; Stuart B. Rosenblum; Rebecca T. Ruck; Ian W. Davies; Bin Hu; Bin Zhong; Jinglai Hao; Tao Ji; Shuai Zan; Rong Liu; Sony Agrawal; Donna Carr; Stephanie Curry; Patricia McMonagle; Karin Bystol; Frederick Lahser; Paul Ingravallo; Shiying Chen; Ernest Asante-Appiah; Joseph A. Kozlowski

We describe the impact of proline modifications, in our tetracyclic-indole based series of nonstructural protein 5A (NS5A) inhibitors, to their replicon profiles. This work identified NS5A inhibitors with an improved and flattened resistance profiles.


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2016

Discovery of potent macrocyclic HCV NS5A inhibitors

Wensheng Yu; Bancha Vibulbhan; Stuart B. Rosenblum; Gregory Scott Martin; A. Samuel Vellekoop; Christian L. Holst; Craig A. Coburn; Michael Wong; Oleg Selyutin; Tao Ji; Bin Zhong; Bin Hu; Lei Chen; Michael P. Dwyer; Yueheng Jiang; Anilkumar G. Nair; Ling Tong; Qingbei Zeng; Sony Agrawal; Donna Carr; Laura Rokosz; Rong Liu; Stephanie Curry; Patricia McMonagle; Paul Ingravallo; Fred Lahser; Ernest Asante-Appiah; James Fells; Joseph A. Kozlowski

HCV NS5A inhibitors have demonstrated impressive in vitro virologic profiles in HCV replicon assays and robust HCV RNA titer reduction in the clinic making them attractive components for inclusion in an all oral fixed-dose combination (FDC) regimen for the treatment of HCV infection. Mercks effort in this area identified MK-4882 and MK-8325 as early development leads. Herein, we describe the discovery of potent macrocyclic NS5A inhibitors bearing the MK-8325 or MK-4882 core structure.

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