Application of a caprylate/chromatography purification process for production of a high potency rabies immune globulin from pooled human plasma

Autor: Catherine Russ, Chad Talton, Vik Arora, Jyoti Srivastava, W. Keither Merritt, Michelle Woznichak, Pete Vandeberg, Marta Jose
Rok vydání: 2021
Předmět:
Zdroj: Journal of Immunological Methods. 499:113164
ISSN: 0022-1759
DOI: 10.1016/j.jim.2021.113164
Popis: Background Human rabies immunoglobulin (RIG) is an integral part of post-exposure prophylactic treatment of rabies (along with rabies vaccination). Infiltration of most, if not all, of the RIG dose at the wound site is recommended. RIG produced by a caprylate/chromatography manufacturing process (RIG-C; HyperRAB) increased the potency and purity of this product over the existing licensed RIG from a solvent/detergent process (RIG-S/D; HyperRAB-S/D). Methods A series of studies were conducted to characterize the content and purity of RIG-C. A single-dose pharmacokinetic study in rabbits was performed to compare intramuscular (IM) immunoglobulin products manufactured by two different purification processes, solvent/detergent (IGIM-S/D) and caprylate/chromatography (IGIM-C). Results RIG-C was found to be a highly purified IgG formulation with high monomer content and formulated with twice the anti-rabies potency of RIG-S/D while maintaining the same overall protein concentration. RIG-C facilitates IM administration at the wound site by halving the injection volume. The new caprylate/chromatography process eliminated detectible levels of pro-coagulant impurities and IgA that were carried through in the prior S/D process. These impurities have been associated with thrombotic complications and allergic reactions in susceptible patients. After single dose administration, IGIM-C was pharmacokinetically equivalent to IGIM-S/D in rabbits. Conclusion RIG-C is a more potent RIG formulation with less impurities yielding a safer and more convenient product with similar pharmacokinetic profile.
Databáze: OpenAIRE