Adenoviral conjunctivitis is the most common cause of conjunctivitis worldwide with no approved antiviral treatment. Benzalkonium chloride (BAK) is a common preservative in ophthalmic medications and is the active ingredient in some skin disinfectants and hand sanitizers. BAK is known to be effective in killing bacteria and enveloped viruses; however, its activity against ocular types of nonenveloped adenoviruses (Ads) is unknown. The goal was to determine whether BAK is an effective antiviral agent against common human ocular types of adenovirus . The direct inactivating activity of BAK was determined by incubating several human adenovirus types with BAK concentrations of 0.001%, 0.003%, 0.005%, 0.01%, 0.1%, and 0% for 1 h at 33°C. Resulting adenovirus titers were determined after treatment. Decreases in titers of ≥3 Log were considered virucidal, while decreases in titers of <1 Log were considered ineffective. BAK 0.1% was virucidal for Ad3, Ad5, Ad7a, Ad19/64, and Ad37, while it reduced titers >1 Log, but <3 Log for Ad4 and Ad8. Decreases in titers >1 Log were demonstrated for BAK 0.003%, 0.005%, and 0.01% for Ad5 only. Decreases in titers for the other adenovirus types for those concentrations were ≤0.53 Log. 0.001% BAK produced minimal decreases in titers for all types. BAK, at 0.01% or less was not consistently effective as an antiviral against adenovirus, but higher concentrations, such as 0.1%, should be further investigated as a possible topical treatment for adenoviral ocular infections, providing ocular toxicity is not an issue.
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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6588108 | PMC |
http://dx.doi.org/10.1089/jop.2018.0145 | DOI Listing |
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