Literature DB >> 19055228

A consensus rating method for small virus-retentive filters. I. Method development.

Scott Lute1, William Riordan, Leonard F Pease, De-Hao Tsai, Richard Levy, Mohammed Haque, Jerold Martin, Ichiro Moroe, Terry Sato, Michael Morgan, Mani Krishnan, Jennifer Campbell, Paul Genest, Sherri Dolan, Klaus Tarrach, Anika Meyer, Michael R Zachariah, Michael J Tarlov, Mark EtzeL, Kurt Brorson, Hazel Aranha, Mark Bailey, Jean Bender, Jeff Carter, Qi Chen, Chris Dowd, Raj Jani, David Jen, Stanley Kidd, Ted Meltzer, Kathryn Remington, Iris Rice, Cynthia Romero, Terry Sato, Maik Jornitz, Carol Marcus Sekura, Gail Sofer, Rachel Specht, Peter Wojciechowski.   

Abstract

Virus filters are membrane-based devices that remove large viruses (e.g., retroviruses) and/or small viruses (e.g., parvoviruses) from products by a size exclusion mechanism. In 2002, the Parenteral Drug Association (PDA) organized the PDA Virus Filter Task Force to develop a common nomenclature and a standardized test method for classifying and identifying viral-retentive filters. One goal of the task force was to develop a test method for small virus-retentive filters. Because small virus-retentive filters present unique technical challenges, the test method development process was guided by laboratory studies to determine critical variables such as choice of bacteriophage challenge, choice of model protein, filtration operating parameters, target log10 reduction value, and filtration endpoint definition. Based on filtration, DLS, electrospray differential mobility analysis, and polymerase chain reaction studies, a final rating based on retention of bacteriophage PP7 was chosen by the PDA Virus Filter Task Force. The detailed final consensus filter method was published in the 2008 update of PDA Technical Report 41. Virus Filtration.

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Year:  2008        PMID: 19055228

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  PDA J Pharm Sci Technol        ISSN: 1079-7440


  2 in total

1.  Fabrication of highly uniform nanoparticles from recombinant silk-elastin-like protein polymers for therapeutic agent delivery.

Authors:  Rajasekhar Anumolu; Joshua A Gustafson; Jules J Magda; Joseph Cappello; Hamidreza Ghandehari; Leonard F Pease
Journal:  ACS Nano       Date:  2011-07-05       Impact factor: 15.881

2.  Evaluation of electrospray differential mobility analysis for virus particle analysis: Potential applications for biomanufacturing.

Authors:  Suvajyoti Guha; Leonard F Pease; Kurt A Brorson; Michael J Tarlov; Michael R Zachariah
Journal:  J Virol Methods       Date:  2011-09-22       Impact factor: 2.014

  2 in total

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