RIGVIR

RIGVIR is a virotherapy medication approved by the State Agency of Medicines of the Republic of Latvia.[1] It was developed in the 1960s and 1970s by the team of Aina Muceniece (1924–2010) and patented in 2002.[2][3]

Virions of enteroviruses in Rigvir

Rigvir is a drug containing a live and natural virus (ECHO-7[1]) which has cytolytic and immunomodulating effects. Cytolytic action – finding and destroying malignant cells, applies only to the cancer cells without affecting the normal tissue cells. Regarding immunomodulation, because of its structure Rigvir selectively affects cells in sensitive tumors. Rigvir activates cells of the immune system due to what causes specific immune response against itself. It is not genetically modified and not a pathogenic virus It is not able to be replicated in the human body. It is issued in oncology for the prevention of secondary immunodeficiency.

RIGVIR was registered in Latvia on 29 April 2004, a few days before Latvia joined the European Union.[4] Since Rigvir was registered via a national registration procedure, it has not been tested in the standard clinical trials required for central registration in the European Union.[5]

History

Rigvir antigen in tumor cells

Since Latvia is a member of European Union, according to Article 88 (DIRECTIVE 2001/83/EC on the Community code relating to medicinal products for human use), Member States shall prohibit the advertising to general public of medicinal products which are available on medical prescription only (page 26).

Side effects

The most common side effects are subfebrile temperature, pain in the tumor, fatigue, drowsiness, and dyspepsia (diarrhea).[9]

See also

References

  1. 1 2 For a freely accessible English version see page 642 of Chumakov PM, Morozova VV, Babkin IV, Baikov IK, Netesov SV, Tikunova NV (2012). "Oncolytic enteroviruses" (PDF). Molecular Biology. 46 (5): 639–50. doi:10.1134/S0026893312050032.
    For the original version in Russian see Chumakov PM, Morozova VV, Babkin IV, Baĭkov IK, Netesov SV, Tikunova NV (2012). "[Oncolytic enteroviruses] (Russian).". Molekulyarnaya Biologiya. 46 (5): 712–25. PMID 23156670.
  2. "Inventions and Inventors of Latvia". Retrieved 8 April 2013.
  3. 1 2 EP application 1537872, Aina Muceniece, "Immunostimulator having antineoplastic action and method for producing said immunostimulator", published 2005-06-08
  4. 1 2 "Rigvir šķīdums injekcijām". Medicinal product register of the Republic of Latvia. 2004-04-29. Retrieved 2016-11-02.
  5. "Feasibility study for registration of medicine RIGVIR with the European Medicine Agency". European Commission. 2016-01-08. Archived from the original on 2016-11-02. Retrieved 2016-11-02. However,further use and commercialisation in the EU is prevented as EU regulations require cancer medicines to be registered centrally through the European Medicine Agency (EMA). National registrations are not considered.
  6. Muceniece A.J. 1978. Analysis of sensitivity of human melanomas to enteroviruses adaptred to these tumors.In: Virusy v terapii opukholei (Viruses in Antitumor Therapy), Riga: Zinatne, pp. 175–189.
  7. 1 2 Muceniece A.J., Bumbieris J.V. 1982. Transplantation antigens and their changes in carcinogenesis and viral infection. In: Virusnyi onkoliz i iskusstvennaya geterogenizatsiya opukholei (Viral Oncolysis and Artificial Heterogenization of Tumors). Riga, pp. 217–234.
  8. Karsaulidze, Eka (2015). "Georgia's Aversi Now Selling Riga Virus Cancer Treatment". Georgia Today. Archived from the original on 2016-03-12. Retrieved 2016-11-03. Rigvir was officially registered by the Ministry of Labor, Health and Social Affairs of Georgia on February 15, 2015.
  9. "Summary of product characteristics". RIGVIR. Archived from the original on 2016-04-16. Retrieved 2016-11-03.
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