artículo científico
Assessing endotoxins in equine-derived snake antivenoms: Comparison of the USP pyrogen test and the Limulus Amoebocyte Lysate assay (LAL)
Fecha
2015-08-29Registro en:
0041-0101
10.1016/j.toxicon.2015.08.015
741-A9-003
Autor
Solano Trejos, María Gabriela
León Montero, Guillermo
Gómez Argüello, Aarón
Institución
Resumen
Snake antivenoms are parenterally administered; therefore, endotoxin content must be strictly controlled. Following international indications to calculate endotoxin limits, it was determined that
antivenom doses between 20 mL and 120 mL should not exceed 17.5 Endotoxin Units per milliliter (EU/
mL) and 2.9 EU/mL, respectively. The rabbit pyrogen test (RPT) has been used to evaluate endotoxin
contamination in antivenoms, but some laboratories have recently implemented the LAL assay. We
compared the capability of both tests to evaluate endotoxin contamination in antivenoms, and we found
that both methods can detect all endotoxin concentrations in the range of the antivenom specifications.
The acceptance criteria of RPT and LAL must be harmonized by calculating the endotoxin limit as the
quotient of the threshold pyrogenic dose and the therapeutic dose and the dose administered to rabbits
as the quotient of the threshold pyrogenic dose and the endotoxin limit. Since endotoxins from Gramnegative bacteria exert different pyrogenicity, if contamination occurred, antivenom batches that
induce pyrogenic reactions may be found in spite of passing LAL specifications. Although LAL assay can be used to assess endotoxin content throughout the antivenom manufacturing process, we recommend that the release of final products be based on the results of both methods.