Literature DB >> 1305406

Rabies vaccine standardization: International Collaborative Study for the Characterization of the fifth International Standard for Rabies Vaccine.

J Lyng1, M W Bentzon, M Ferguson, E A Fitzgerald.   

Abstract

A collaborative study was carried out to establish a replacement for the International Standard for Rabies Vaccine, the stocks of which are exhausted. Three rabies vaccines for human use derived from different rabies virus strains and prepared on different cell culture substrates were compared with the International Standard for Rabies Vaccine using in vivo and in vitro assay methods in a collaborative study involving 14 participants. The proposed fifth International Standard (PISRAV) which was derived from the same virus strain as the present international standard preparation, the Pitman Moore (PM) strain, was found to be approximately twice as potent relative to the International Standard in immunogenicity assays as in antigenicity assays. On the other hand another vaccine, derived from the LEP strain, was considerably more potent in antigenicity assays than in immunogenicity assays. The glycoprotein of the proposed replacement standard measured in antigenicity assays appeared to be stable at +37 degrees C for 245 days, whereas the immunogenicity of the proposed replacement vaccine was sensitive to this heat treatment and the vaccine lost 66% of its immunogenic potency. The results of this study indicate that the NIH protection test should continue to form the primary basis for potency assay of rabies vaccine as glycoprotein content does not appear to correlate with immunogenic potency for different types of vaccine. The vaccine coded PISRAV has been established as the fifth International Standard for Rabies Vaccine and a potency of 16 International Units of Rabies Vaccine (based on the immunogenicity assays) assigned to the contents of each ampoule. Each ampoule has also been assigned a unitage of 10 IU of PM Rabies Virus Glycoprotein and 135 IU of PM Rabies Virus Ribonucleoprotein.

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Year:  1992        PMID: 1305406     DOI: 10.1016/s1045-1056(05)80051-x

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Biologicals        ISSN: 1045-1056            Impact factor:   1.856


  5 in total

Review 1.  Rabies-specific antibodies: measuring surrogates of protection against a fatal disease.

Authors:  Susan M Moore; Cathleen A Hanlon
Journal:  PLoS Negl Trop Dis       Date:  2010-03-09

2.  Resetting the adaptive immune system after autologous stem cell transplantation: lessons from responses to vaccines.

Authors:  D M C Brinkman; C M Jol-van der Zijde; M M ten Dam; P A W te Boekhorst; R ten Cate; N M Wulffraat; R Q Hintzen; J M Vossen; M J D van Tol
Journal:  J Clin Immunol       Date:  2007-08-10       Impact factor: 8.317

3.  A time-resolved fluoroimmunoassay to assay the rabies virus glycoprotein: application for estimation of human rabies vaccine potency.

Authors:  Guanfeng Lin; Shaolang Chen; Hui Zhao; Junyu Liang; Qiaoting Deng; Rongliang Liang; Xinxin Guo; Zhenhua Chen; Baihong Chen; Tiancai Liu; Yingsong Wu
Journal:  Sci Rep       Date:  2017-08-04       Impact factor: 4.379

4.  Vaccination with rabies to study the humoral and cellular immune response to a T-cell dependent neoantigen in man.

Authors:  D M C Brinkman; C M Jol-van der Zijde; M M ten Dam; J M Vossen; A D M E Osterhaus; F P Kroon; M J D van Tol
Journal:  J Clin Immunol       Date:  2003-11       Impact factor: 8.542

5.  Non-animal replacement methods for veterinary vaccine potency testing: state of the science and future directions.

Authors:  Jodie Kulpa-Eddy; Geetha Srinivas; Marlies Halder; Richard Hill; Karen Brown; James Roth; Hans Draayer; Jeffrey Galvin; Ivo Claassen; Glen Gifford; Ralph Woodland; Vivian Doelling; Brett Jones; William S Stokes
Journal:  Procedia Vaccinol       Date:  2011-12-23
  5 in total

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