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NanoViricides is in a Great Position to Fight Potential Bird Flu Pandemic with a Drug that the Mercurial H5N1 Influenza A Virus is Unlikely to Escape

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NanoViricides, Inc. (NYSE American:NNVC) (the "Company"), says that its broad-spectrum antiviral drug candidate NV-387 is the best weapon to fight a potential bird flu pandemic because the mercurial H5N1 Influenza A virus would not be able to escape the drug.

"Despite all changes, the H5N1 Influenza A virus should remain susceptible to NV-387 because NV-387 mimics the very essential host-side feature that H5N1 continues to use even as it changes," said Anil R. Diwan, Ph.D., President and Executive Chairman of the Company, adding "This drug puts us in a great position to be able to fight a bird flu pandemic should it happen."

WHO has stated "Available virus sequences from human cases [of H5 infection] have shown some genetic markers that may reduce susceptibility to neuraminidase inhibitors (antiviral medicines such as oseltamivir) [NAIs] or endonuclease inhibitors (such as baloxavir marboxil) [PBIs]" in their updated public health assessment of recent Influenza A H5 infections, dated December 20, 2024[1].

NAIs and PBIs[2] are the only classes of drugs that currently exist for influenza treatment, and as the virus evolves, they are very likely to be rendered ineffective in the field, since already strains with reduced susceptibility are circulating.

While the US Government has already sourced and stockpiled two different H5N1 vaccines, the Biden administration has currently no plans to authorize their use.

Influenza viruses change far more rapidly than SARS-CoV-2 ever did in the COVID-19 pandemic[3]. At least one mutation in the H5 coat protein would be required for efficient infection of humans, and a few more changes that would still be required for rapid human-to-human transmission, in order for the H5N1 virus to turn into a pandemic virus; changes that have not happened yet.

Nevertheless, any currently designed H5N1 vaccines are unlikely to be of much use, or possibly very limited use, from public health perspective to protect from a potential pandemic strain of H5N1 that has not appeared yet.

In any case, vaccine against a rapidly changing virus is a game of chasing a rapidly moving target, as we have all learned from the experience during the COVID-19 pandemic[4].

It is thus clear that a drug that the virus cannot escape is the only appropriate tool to fight a potential pandemic.

We have already developed such a drug. NV-387 is a broad-spectrum antiviral that mimics the very host-side features that the virus continues to require no matter how much it changes in the field. It is highly unlikely that a susceptible virus would escape such a drug.