Singapore: A drug that has been used for over 30 years as an asthma and allergy
medicine is now being tested to treat symptoms of dengue fever. The
National University of Singapore (NUS) and Duke-NUS Graduate Medical
School Singapore (Duke-NUS) are running a clinical trial, in
collaboration with National University Hospital (NUH) and Singapore
General Hospital (SGH), called KETODEN, to test the drug Ketotifen on
patients who are infected with dengue.
Research
that preceded the trial was done at Duke-NUS while the trial is being
conducted in the Investigational Medical Unit (IMU) at NUS with patients
from SGH and NUH.
Ketotifen
is traditionally used to reduce the incidence of asthma and allergy
attacks in patients. It works as an antihistamine and mast cell
stabiliser. One of the symptoms of asthma is vascular leakage, or
movement of fluid in the body that occurs when blood vessels are
damaged. This is caused by the activation of a certain type of immune
cell, the mast cell. Ketotifen works by blocking mast cells, which helps
stop vascular leakage.
Assistant
Professor Ashley St. John and her team, from the Duke-NUS Emerging
Infectious Diseases Programme, were able to show that mast calls react
strongly to dengue virus infection and release pro-inflammatory
proteins, which may cause vascular leakage. It is hypothesised, that
like in asthma, if Ketotifen can block mast cell activation in dengue,
it may be able to block some of the more severe symptoms of dengue.
In
dengue, mast cell activation leads to vascular leakage in animal
models. Vascular leakage is the main complication of dengue where fluids
from the blood are lost from blood vessels into other parts of the body
such as the lining of the lungs. This reduces the overall blood volume
and creates problems from excessive fluid build-up in areas such as the
lungs or abdomen. Excessive or uncontrolled vascular leakage leads to
dengue haemorrhagic fever or dengue with complications, in human
patients.
The
trial, led by Professor Paul Tambyah from the Department of Medicine at
the NUS Yong Loo Lin School of Medicine, is aimed at determining if
Ketotifen can safely alleviate these complications. Currently, dengue
patients are often managed in outpatient clinics by providing fever and
pain relief and advice on fluid intake. If vascular leakage is detected,
or if patients have other complications, then they may be admitted for
observation or intravenous fluids to prevent shock. However, there is no
approved treatment to prevent vascular leakage during dengue
infection.
Dengue
fever is a mosquito-borne viral disease that is endemic in many parts
of the world, including Singapore. Last year Singapore saw a rise in the
number of dengue cases to almost 900 a week in peak months. This year,
there have already been almost 3000 cases of dengue fever. Infection can
lead to high fever, muscle aches, rash and vascular leakage. Vascular
leakage is a key factor in the development of these more severe forms of
the virus. There is currently no medicine approved for the treatment of
dengue fever.
The
collaborators of this trial at Duke-NUS, NUS, NUH and SGH are hopeful
that Ketotifen will prove efficacious and prove to be an effective
treatment for dengue, in a region that sorely needs one.