Jatenzo
Jatenzo
Generic Name
Jatenzo
Mechanism
- Polymerase inhibition – Tilavirin is a nucleoside analogue that is phosphorylated intracellularly and incorporated into viral RNA by the viral RNA-dependent RNA polymerase complex (PB1, PB2, PA).
- Early‑stage replication block – Once incorporated, it causes chain termination and miscoding, preventing elongation of the viral genome.
- Broad‑spectrum activity – The mechanism is independent of hemagglutinin or neuraminidase, enabling activity against strains with sialidase‑resistant mutations.
Pharmacokinetics
| Parameter | Typical Value | Notes |
| Absorption | Oral bioavailability ~30 % | Peak plasma Cmax ~4 h post‑dose |
| Distribution | 70–80 % protein bound (primarily to albumin) | Volume of distribution ~55 L |
| Metabolism | Hepatic phosphorylation → active triphosphate; minor CYP3A4/2C8 oxidation | Limited impact of CYP polymorphisms |
| Excretion | Renal (~60 %) and fecal (~30 %) | Creatinine clearance >60 mL/min predicts normal clearance |
| Half‑life | 6–8 h for the triphosphate form | Steady‑state achieved by day 3 in 5‑day courses |
Indications
- Seasonal or pandemic influenza – Investigational therapy for severe or hospitalized cases, particularly oseltamivir‑resistant strains.
- Compassionate use – Approved for high‑risk patients (e.g., immunocompromised, pregnant) where standard of care is inadequate.
- Research trials – Phase 2/3 studies evaluating efficacy and safety for influenza sub‑types A/H1N1, A/H3N2, and B.
> *No formal approval exists in the United States; use is restricted to IND protocols or compassionate‑use programs.*
Contraindications
- Contraindicated in patients with known hypersensitivity to any component.
- Caution in severe hepatic impairment (Child‑Pugh C) – limited safety data.
- Potential embryotoxicity – Animal studies demonstrate fetal toxicity at high doses; avoid in pregnancy unless therapy is essential.
- Drug interactions – Strong CYP3A4 inhibitors (e.g., ketoconazole, ritonavir) may increase plasma exposure; consider dose adjustment.
- Renal dysfunction – No dose adjustment recommended for mild–moderate CKD; severe CKD (eGFR <30 mL/min) not studied.
Dosing
- Adults: 400 mg orally twice daily (BID) for 5 days (total cumulative dose 4 g).
- Long‑term courses (e.g., for severe RSV) may be extended to 7 days under specialist supervision.
- Pediatrics: 20 mg/kg/day (max 400 mg BID) divided q12h for 5 days, based on clinical trial data.
- Special populations:
- Pregnancy: Use only when potential benefit outweighs unknown risks.
- Renal impairment: Standard dosing; monitor drug levels if available.
> *Start therapy within 48 h of symptom onset to maximize efficacy; delay reduces viral clearance.*
Adverse Effects
| Symptom | Incidence | Remarks |
| Nausea/diarrhea | 20–30 % | Mild, often self‑limited |
| Headache | 10–12 % | Typically dose‑dependent |
| Rash / pruritus | <5 % | Monitor for hypersensitivity |
| Abdominal discomfort | 4 % | Not usually severe |
| Elevated ALT/AST | 2–3 % | Transient; monitor LFTs |
| Neutropenia | 4 g/kg | Avoid in pregnancy |
> *No data support significant QT prolongation; still, concurrent QT‑prolonging agents should be avoided.*
Monitoring
- Baseline labs: CBC, CMP (ALT/AST, bilirubin), renal profile, viral PCR quantification.
- During therapy:
- Day 3–5: Repeat CBC & LFTs; assess clinical response.
- Viral load: Quantitative PCR to evaluate decline (≥3‑log₁₀ reduction typically indicates success).
- Post‑therapy: Follow‑up PCR for viral clearance; assess for secondary bacterial infections.
Clinical Pearls
- Early treatment is key. Initiate Jatenzo as soon as influenza is suspected, especially in high‑risk individuals or in outbreak settings.
- Broad‑spectrum edge. Its activity against oseltamivir‑resistant H274Y strains and certain RSV isolates makes it a valuable alternative during antiviral shortages.
- Indication flexibility. While primarily studied for influenza, ongoing trials are expanding its use to other RNA viruses (RSV, dengue); look for emerging IND protocols.
- Patient selection. Ideal for immunocompromised, pregnant, or severe cases where standard neuraminidase inhibitors fail or are contraindicated.
- Safety monitoring. Regular CBC and liver enzymes are essential; consider dose adjustment or discontinuation if ALT >3× ULN or neutrophil count Takeaway: Jatenzo is a promising investigational antiviral with a distinct mechanism that bypasses typical resistance pathways. While not officially approved, its growing evidence base supports use in selected high‑risk or treatment‑refractory influenza patients under rigorous monitoring.