Welsh shingles drug set for final hurdle
Cardiff University's Professor of Medical Chemistry, Chris McGuigan, who led the team which discovered the new antiviral drug, said: "We are now entering the final and most crucial stage in the journey from the discovery of a new drug to the market.
"If we successfully complete this stage the drug would be available to help alleviate the pain and suffering for millions of shingles patients, not only in Wales but across the world."
In Phase I trials of FV-100, no serious adverse events in healthy volunteers were reported and data supported the potential for once-a-day dosing in future trials.Previous lab research has also shown the drug to be up to 10,000 times more potent against the virus than existing treatments.
Professor McGuigan added: "We believe this drug has the potential to be the most powerful inhibitor ever discovered to treat shingles.
"Each year only 15-20 new medicines are approved for clinical use and the chance of FV100 becoming an approved medicine improves the further we successfully progress through each of the clinical stages.
"We are incredibly excited at the prospect of FV-100 becoming commercially available in the future, and potentially being the first drug discovered in Cardiff University to make it to the marketplace."
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