Infectious hepatitis (hepatitis A) research in nonhuman primates.

Autor: Hilleman MR, Provost PJ, Villarejos VM, Buynak EB, Miller WJ, Ittensohn OL, Wolanski BS, McAleer WJ
Jazyk: angličtina
Zdroj: Bulletin of the Pan American Health Organization [Bull Pan Am Health Organ] 1977; Vol. 11 (2), pp. 140-52.
Abstrakt: A satisfactory animal model has been found for laboratory studies of human hepatitis A-namely, the white-moustached marmoset (Saguinus mystax). With this species it has been possible to perform serum-neutralization tests and to develop immune-adherence and complement-fixation tests demonstrating antigen and antibody to the virus. The recent work in marmosets has also led to determination of the agent's characteristics: it most closely resembles the enteroviruses of the picornavirus family. These advances open the way for development of a routine serologic test for diagnosis of the disease, of a human immune globulin for general use that would be precisely standardized for hepatitis A antibody, and, ultimately, of a vaccine. They also provide bases for epidemiologic studies that could reveal nonspecific measures for the disease's control. In addition, there is indication that marmosets could be used for safety control of the hepatitis B vaccine that has already been developed. An adequate supply of S. mystax-threatened by recent embargoes on their exportation-is essential to continuation of this work. The question of marmoset supply, both in the short term and over the long range, deserves serious review.
Databáze: MEDLINE