Human Maternal-Fetal Interface Cellular Models to Assess Antiviral Drug Toxicity during Pregnancy

Author:

Herbek Savannah L.,Smithgall Marie C.ORCID,Murphy Elisabeth A.,Schwartz Robert E.,Chen Shuibing,Riley Laura E.,Stuhlmann HeidiORCID,Yang Yawei J.ORCID,Goswami RiaORCID

Abstract

Pregnancy is a period of elevated risk for viral disease severity, resulting in serious health consequences for both the mother and the fetus; yet antiviral drugs lack comprehensive safety and efficacy data for use among pregnant women. In fact, pregnant women are systematically excluded from therapeutic clinical trials to prevent potential fetal harm. Current FDA-recommended reproductive toxicity assessments are studied using small animals which often do not accurately predict the human toxicological profiles of drug candidates. Here, we review the potential of human maternal-fetal interface cellular models in reproductive toxicity assessment of antiviral drugs. We specifically focus on the 2- and 3-dimensional maternal placental models of different gestational stages and those of fetal embryogenesis and organ development. Screening of drug candidates in physiologically relevant human maternal-fetal cellular models will be beneficial to prioritize selection of safe antiviral therapeutics for clinical trials in pregnant women.

Funder

New York Presbyterian-Weill Cornell Medical Center Alumni Council

Weill Cornell Medicine- Department of Pediatrics Research

Weill Cornell Medicine COVID 19 Research

Publisher

MDPI AG

Subject

General Earth and Planetary Sciences,General Environmental Science

Reference178 articles.

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