Ivermectin is a miracle drug. It cures infections caused by several types of parasitic roundworms, including
those that cause river blindness and elephantiasis, two highly unpleasant diseases.
Half of the 2015 Nobel Price for Physiology or Medicine was awarded to
researchers who discovered the drug.
More recently, ivermectin was touted
as a treatment for SARS-CoV-2. Unfortunately, after more than 90 human clinical
trials, the preponderance of evidence shows that it is ineffective against
COVID-19. A new (open-access) Perspective in J. Med. Chem. by Olaf Andersen,
Jayme Dahlin, and collaborators at Weill Cornell Medicine, the National Institutes
of Health, University of North Carolina Chapel Hill, and University of California
San Francisco explores why it proved so misleading, with lessons for other drug
repurposing efforts.
In 2011, ivermectin was one of 480
compounds tested in a biochemical assay at 50 µM and appeared to disrupt the
interaction between HIV integrase and a mammalian protein involved in viral trafficking.
In April 2020, low micromolar concentrations of ivermectin were reported to
have anti-SARS-CoV-2 activity in a cellular assay. Given a terrifying new
disease with no treatments, an approved drug that showed even tenuous activity looked
like a lifeline. Researchers around the world began studying ivermectin. PubMed
citations jumped from 459 in 2019 to 734 in 2021.
The new paper examines some of this past work and dives deeply into the biological effects of ivermectin. The
molecule is poorly soluble in water (around 1-2 µM) and partitions into
cellular membranes, where it activates a chloride channel receptor in worms, paralyzing
them. At this it is quite potent: when taken as directed, human plasma
concentrations of ivermectin are around 60 nM, but because the drug is highly
protein bound the free concentration is only around 6 nM.
The astute reader may notice that
the apparent antiviral activity was observed at low micromolar concentrations of
ivermectin, three orders of magnitude higher than physiologically relevant, and
the initial biochemical assay was conducted at an even higher concentration. In
fact, that work was done using an AlphaScreen, which is notoriously sensitive to
artifacts. The new paper demonstrates that ivermectin forms aggregates at low
micromolar concentrations, and that these aggregates interfere with the
AlphaScreen. (We previously wrote about how many of the early reports of compounds active against SARS-CoV-2 proteins were in fact aggregators.)
If ivermectin perturbs membrane
proteins in worms, what does it do in human cells? The researchers tested the
drug against panels of G protein-coupled receptors (GPCRs) and found that in one
assay format it inhibited more than a quarter of 168 GPCRs at 10 µM, much higher than physiologically relevant but comparable to the in vitro experiments with SARS-CoV-2. Further studies revealed that ivermectin changes the properties of membranes at low micromolar concentrations, as
assessed by multiple methods including electrophysiological assays. Several
ivermectin analogs were also tested and found to have similar activity, consistent
with nonspecific effects. Impressively, these experiments were done blinded to
the experimenter.
You might think that messing with membranes would not be good for cells, and you would be right. The researchers
found that ivermectin decreased cell viability at low micromolar concentrations
in a variety of assay formats through multiple mechanisms, both cytotoxic and
apoptotic. Importantly, the concentrations at which ivermectin was active
against cells were similar to the concentrations where it showed activity
against SARS-CoV-2. The researchers also analyzed 766 PubChem assays and found
that ivermectin is active in nearly a third of those assessing cellular
toxicity. Killing a host cell is certainly one way of killing a virus, but likely not
a useful one.
In summary, the original data suggesting that ivermectin is a developable antiviral agent was flawed. The researchers describe
this as “a saga of the damage that can be done by assay interference compounds”
and a “cautionary tale for the dangers of ‘pandemic exceptionalism.’” They
continue:
The fact that a repurposed
drug is well-characterized clinically, or that there is an ongoing pandemic, may
justify performing clinical and mechanistic experiments in parallel, but not
skipping mechanistic studies, where the key experiments could have been done in
a matter of a few weeks/months.
This J. Med. Chem. paper is
a meticulous, comprehensive study; with 71 pages of supporting information
there is far more to cover than I can do justice to in a blog post. The paper
also includes a useful flowchart for derisking nonspecific membrane
perturbation. It is well worth reading, particularly for
those new to drug discovery. As Richard Feynman warned, “the first principle
is that you must not fool yourself -- and you are the easiest person to fool.”