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    Home»Health»Researchers Unveil Simple Drug-Free Spray That Could Prevent COVID, Flu, and Colds
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    Researchers Unveil Simple Drug-Free Spray That Could Prevent COVID, Flu, and Colds

    By Brigham and Women's HospitalSeptember 30, 20244 Comments5 Mins Read
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    A Drug Free, Pathogen Capture and Neutralizing Nasal Spray To Fight Respiratory Infection
    Pathogens inhaled along with respiratory droplets enter through the nasal lining, causing respiratory infections. Brigham researchers have developed a pathogen capture and neutralizing spray (PCANS), which coats the nasal cavity, capturing large respiratory droplets and serving as a physical barrier against a broad spectrum of viruses and bacteria, while effectively neutralizing them. Credit: Courtesy of Randal McKenzie, McKenzie Illustrations

    Brigham researchers have developed a nasal spray called PCANS that blocks a wide range of respiratory infections by trapping and neutralizing pathogens in the nose. In lab and animal tests, the spray effectively prevented infection, offering promising future applications if validated in humans.

    Researchers at Brigham have developed a spray that could provide wide-ranging protection against respiratory infections including COVID-19, influenza, common cold viruses, and bacteria that cause pneumonia.

    A new study details how a nasal spray formulated by investigators from Brigham and Women’s Hospital, a founding member of the Mass General Brigham healthcare system, may work to protect against viral and bacterial respiratory infections. Based on their preclinical studies, the researchers say the broad-spectrum nasal spray is long-lasting, safe, and, if validated in humans, could play a key role in reducing respiratory diseases and safeguarding public health against new threats. Their results are published in the journal Advanced Materials.

    “The COVID pandemic showed us what respiratory pathogens can do to humanity in a very short time. That threat hasn’t gone away,” said co-senior author Jeffrey Karp, PhD, distinguished chair in Anesthesiology at Brigham and Women’s Hospital. “Not only do we have the flu to deal with seasonally, but we now have COVID, too.”

    How Respiratory Infections Spread

    Influenza and COVID-19 infections cause thousands of deaths and hundreds of thousands of cases of severe disease every year. Milder infections cause significant discomfort, resulting in missed work or school.

    Vaccines against these viruses can be beneficial, but they’re imperfect. Vaccinated people still get infected and spread the infection to others. Masks are also helpful but aren’t perfect, either — they can leak, and many people wear them improperly or choose not to wear them at all.

    “We need new, additional ways to protect ourselves and reduce the transmission of the disease,” Karp said.

    Most viruses enter our system through the nose. When we catch an airborne infection like the flu or COVID, we breathe out tiny droplets of fluids that contain the pathogen. Healthy people around us breathe in these pathogen-containing droplets, which attach inside their nose and infect the cells that line the nasal passageways. The pathogen replicates and can be released back into the air when an individual who is sick, whether they know it or not, sneezes, coughs, laughs, sings, or even just breathes.

    The new study details the research team’s efforts to create a nasal spray to defend against airborne respiratory illness. “The spray, called Pathogen Capture and Neutralizing Spray (PCANS) in the paper, was developed using ingredients from the FDA’s Inactive Ingredient Database (IID), which have been previously used in approved nasal sprays, or from the Generally Recognized as Safe (GRAS) list of the FDA,” said co-senior author Nitin Joshi, PhD, an Assistant Professor of Anesthesiology at Brigham and Women’s Hospital. “We developed a drug-free formulation using these compounds to block germs in three ways — PCANS forms a gel-like matrix that traps respiratory droplets, immobilizes the germs, and effectively neutralizes them, preventing infection.”

    The researchers did the experiments detailed in the study in laboratory settings. They have not studied PCANS directly in humans. The researchers developed the formulation and studied its ability to capture respiratory droplets in a 3D-printed replica of a human nose. They showed that when sprayed in the nasal cavity replica, PCANS captured twice as many droplets as mucus alone.

    Laboratory Successes of PCANS

    “PCANS forms a gel, increasing its mechanical strength by a hundred times, forming a solid barrier,” said primary author John Joseph, PhD, a former postdoctoral fellow at Brigham and Women’s Hospital. “It blocked and neutralized almost 100% of all viruses and bacteria we tested, including Influenza, SARS-CoV-2, RSV, adenovirus, K Pneumonia and more.”

    Experiments in mice showed that a single dose of the PCANS nasal spray could effectively block infection from an influenza virus (PR8) at 25 times the lethal dose. Virus levels in the lungs were reduced by >99.99%, and the inflammatory cells and cytokines in the lungs of PCANS-treated animals were normal.

    “The formulation’s ability to inactivate a broad spectrum of pathogens, including the deadly PR8 influenza virus, demonstrates its high effectiveness,” said co-senior author Yohannes Tesfaigzi, PhD, AstraZeneca Professor of Medicine in the Field of Respiratory and Inflammatory Diseases at Brigham and Women’s Hospital. “In a rigorous mouse model study, prophylactic treatment with PCANS demonstrated exceptional efficacy, with treated mice exhibiting complete protection, while the untreated group showed no such benefit.”

    While the study’s limitations include the lack of human studies of PCANS, it provides a strong foundation for future research to explore the full potential of PCANS in a broader context. The researchers are exploring whether PCANS can also block allergens, opening a potential new avenue for allergy relief.

    Reference: “Toward a Radically Simple Multi-Modal Nasal Spray for Preventing Respiratory Infections” by John Joseph, Helna Mary Baby, Joselyn Rojas Quintero, Devin Kenney, Yohannes A Mebratu, Eshant Bhatia, Purna Shah, Kabir Swain, Dongtak Lee, Shahdeep Kaur, Xiang-Ling Li, John Mwangi, Olivia Snapper, Remya Nair, Eli Agus, Sruthi Ranganathan, Julian Kage, Jingjing Gao, James N Luo, Anthony Yu, Dongsung Park, Florian Douam, Yohannes Tesfaigzi, Jeffrey M Karp and Nitin Joshi, 24 September 2024, Advanced Materials.
    DOI: 10.1002/adma.202406348

    This study was supported by funding from the Gillian Reny Stepping Strong Center for Trauma Innovation at Brigham and Women’s Hospital, and the Department of Anesthesiology, Perioperative, and Pain Medicine at Brigham and Women’s Hospital.

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    4 Comments

    1. Sydney Ross Singer on September 30, 2024 5:45 am

      Three problems with this are apparent up front.

      1. What if you breathe through the mouth, which is likely once your nose is filled with this goo? Mice do not breathe the same way humans do.

      2. Conflict of Interest
      “J.J., H.M.B, Y.T., and J.M.K have one pending patent based on the PCANS formulation described in this manuscript. N.J. and J.M.K are paid consultants, scientific advisory board members, and hold equity in Akita Biosciences, a company that has licensed IP generated by N.J. and J.MK. that may benefit financially if the IP was further validated.”

      3. They tortured animals for this research, giving them influenza virus, which killed all the control group. Since this is apparently made from materials the FDA considers benign, why not try it in humans right away? You don’t always need to harm animals every time a researcher gets an idea.

      Reply
    2. Liviu Ficior on September 30, 2024 8:01 am

      I think that the health is (must be) the humanity’s nr.1 priority. If we don’t understand this thing (right now, right here – not yesterday or too late) we’ll find nothing. Nothing of us… Any disvorery which may us living tomorrow is much, much more important than everything else. Because tomorrow means our chidren. Yes, the Covid is a very bad enemy! But You show us that we can beat it. It was a great satisfaction to read about this new weapon against the illness, against Covid. Many congratulations to You, Scitechdaily, a very useful & very good written material! Best wishes from Romania, Thank You very much!

      Reply
    3. Jet on September 30, 2024 8:38 am

      Yes, Please! If the ingredients are benign, why wait?
      Sounds like the old remedy of putting Vicks in your nose to ward off viruses, but better.

      Reply
    4. Angelus on September 30, 2024 1:49 pm

      Even if you never breathed through your mouth, you can still become infected by some airborne pathogens, influenza and coronaviruses included, via your eyes.

      Reply
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