| Literature DB >> 29045429 |
Robert A Harrison1, George O Oluoch2, Stuart Ainsworth1, Jaffer Alsolaiss1, Fiona Bolton1, Ana-Silvia Arias3, José-María Gutiérrez3, Paul Rowley1, Stephen Kalya4, Hastings Ozwara2, Nicholas R Casewell1.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Antivenom is the treatment of choice for snakebite, which annually kills an estimated 32,000 people in sub-Saharan Africa and leaves approximately 100,000 survivors with permanent physical disabilities that exert a considerable socioeconomic burden. Over the past two decades, the high costs of the most polyspecifically-effective antivenoms have sequentially reduced demand, commercial manufacturing incentives and production volumes that have combined to create a continent-wide vacuum of effective snakebite therapy. This was quickly filled with new, less expensive antivenoms, many of which are of untested efficacy. Some of these successfully marketed antivenoms for Africa are inappropriately manufactured with venoms from non-African snakes and are dangerously ineffective. The uncertain efficacy of available antivenoms exacerbates the complexity of designing intervention measures to reduce the burden of snakebite in sub-Saharan Africa. The objective of this study was to preclinically determine the ability of antivenoms available in Kenya to neutralise the lethal effects of venoms from the most medically important snakes in East Africa.Entities:
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Year: 2017 PMID: 29045429 PMCID: PMC5646754 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pntd.0005969
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS Negl Trop Dis ISSN: 1935-2727
Global snakebite incidence and fatality statistics.
| Region | Bite Incidences | Deaths | % Fatality |
|---|---|---|---|
| 420,000 | 32,000 | 7.6% | |
| 1,100,000 | 58,000 | 4.8% | |
| 129,000 | 2,300 | 1.7% | |
| Adapted from ‘high estimate’ data from Kasturiratne et al. [ | |||
Fig 1Concerns over an antivenom widely marketed in sub-Saharan Africa.
Why are venoms from the Asian Russell’s viper (Daboia russelii—incorrectly labelled here as Vipera russelli) and saw-scaled viper (Echis carinatus) included in its efficacy statement?.
Information upon each antivenom described by the product insert.
| Brand | Manufacturer | Characteristics | Stated Efficacy |
|---|---|---|---|
| Premium Serums and Vaccines, PVT. Ltd, Quthbullapur, India | Expiry Date: 01/2018 | Each ml neutralises over 25 venom LD50 for: | |
| VINS Bioproducts Ltd, Telangana, India | Expiry Date: 04/2020 | Each ml neutralises over 20 venom LD50 for: | |
| INOSAN Biopharma, SA Madrid, Spain | Expiry Date: 11/2018 | Each vial contains no less than 500 units of neutralisation (LD50) for venoms of | |
| Sanofi Pasteur SA, Lyon, France | Expiry Date: 06/2016 | Each ml neutralises over 25 venom LD50 for: | |
| South African Vaccine Producers (PTY) Ltd, Gauteng, South Africa | Expiry Date: 08/2012 | Effective against venoms of all Rinkhals, mambas, cobras and vipers likely to cause life-threatening envenomation in Southern and Central Africa. | |
| South African Vaccine Producers (PTY) Ltd, Gauteng, South Africa | Expiry Date: 02/2012 | Neutralises the venom of |
E. carinatus*—this nominal previously covered all Echis saw-scaled vipers. The genus has since been split into several species, with E. carinatus sub-species (E. c. carinatus, E. c. sochureki) only found in the Middle East and the Asian subcontinent The inclusion here of “ECHIS CARINATUS” in the brand name does not therefore refer to Asian/Middle East saw-scaled vipers.
The murine venom lethal dose (LD50) of the East African snakes.
The venom LD50 is provided as μg venom per mouse and as μg venom per gram body weight as both metrics are used in the literature.
| Common name | Snake Species (Origin) | Venom lethal dose LD50 μg/mouse (95% CI) | Venom lethal dose LD50 μg/g body weight (95% CI) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Puff adder | 19.55 (14.76–27.40) | 1.03 (0.78–1.44) | |
| Saw-scaled viper | 16.00 (10.22–25.43) | 0.84 (0.54–1.33) | |
| Black-necked spitting cobra | 24.40 (17.64–30.78) | 1.28 (0.93–1.62) | |
| Red spitting cobra | 9.29 (3.76–13.23) | 0.49 (0.20–0.70) | |
| Egyptian cobra | 8.15 (6.55–9.89) | 0.43 (0.35–0.52) | |
| Black mamba | 6.17 (3.09–10.20) | 0.32 (0.16–0.54) |
The volume of the ‘gold standard’ SAIMR antivenoms that protect 50% and 100% (the ED50 and 2x ED50) of the mice from the lethal toxicity of the East African snake venoms.
| Snake Common name | Snake Species | Venom LD50 | The volumes (μl) of SAIMR antivenoms that protect 50% and 100% (the calculated ED50 and 2xED50 respectively) of the mice from the lethal toxicity of the venoms | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| SAIMR Polyvalent | SAIMR ECHIS CARINATUS | ||||
| Puff adder | 5x (97.8) | ED50 | 21.07 (18.8–23.5) | ||
| 2xED50 | 42.14 | ||||
| Saw-scaled viper | 5x (80) | ED50 | 17.56 (15.1–19.3) | ||
| 2xED50 | 35.12 | ||||
| Black-necked spitting cobra | 2.5x (61) | ED50 | 69.17 (61.7–73.4) | ||
| 2xED50 | 138.34 | ||||
| Red spitting cobra | 5x (46.5) | ED50 | 73.52 (51.8–84.6) | ||
| 2xED50 | 147.04 | ||||
| Egyptian cobra | 5x (40.8) | ED50 | 71.00 (69.2–73.3) | ||
| 2xED50 | 142.0 | ||||
| Black mamba | 5x (30.85) | ED50 | 13.82 (11.8–15.5) | ||
| 2xED50 | 27.64 | ||||
Fig 2Variant efficacy of the ‘test’ antivenoms against the lethal effects of the six East African venoms in a mouse model.
The percent survival of mice injected with lethal doses of venom mixed with the ‘test’ antivenoms in volumes equivalent to half (0.5), the same (1x) or 2.5-fold more (2.5x) of the 100% effective volume of the SAIMR ‘gold standard’ antivenoms was used to identify whether the ‘test’ Premium Serums & Vaccines, VINS, INOSAN and Sanofi Pasteur antivenom were ineffective (red bar), partially effective (yellow bar), effective but requiring a higher dose of antivenom than the SAIMR products (light green bar), an equivalent dose efficacy as the SAIMR products (dark green bar) or a superior dose efficacy than the SAIMR antivenoms (blue bar). The test venoms were East African puff adders (B. arietans; 97.8 μg), saw-scaled vipers (E. p. leakeyi; 80.5 μg), black necked spitting cobras (N. nigricollis; 61.0 μg), red spitting cobras (N. pallida; 46.5 μg), Egyptian cobras (N. haje; 40.8 μg) and black mambas (D. polylepis; 30.8 μg). Please refer to Supplementary S1 Table for details on antivenom volumes, amounts of antivenom in mg, snake geographical origin and venom LD50 dose used for each experimental group. * Mice died from the high density of antivenom/venom complexes that precipitate out of solution, not from venom-induced effects. With experience, the symptoms of this cause of death can be readily distinguished from that caused by venom. This occurs occasionally in murine preclinical testing as a consequence of the 30 minute, 37°C incubation of the venom/antivenom mixture prior to injection. It likely has no clinical relevance, but can obfuscate preclinical results.
Fig 3The IgG reactivity (titre) of six commercial antivenoms against six sub-Saharan Africa venoms determined by titration ELISA.
All antivenoms were adjusted to 5 mg/ml in PBS prior to being diluted 1 in 100 and then serially diluted 1 in 5 and applied to venoms. Panel (A) = SAIMR polyvalent, (B) = SAIMR ECHIS CARINATUS, (C) = Sanofi Pasteur, (D) = VINS (E) = INOSAN, (F) = Premium Serums & Vaccines (PS&V) antivenoms. Venoms: B. arietans (blue), E. p. leakeyi (red), N. nigricollis (green), N. pallida (purple), N. haje (orange) and D. polylepis (black). Results are the mean of three replicates with error bars representing standard deviation (SD). Error bars are not shown where SD is smaller than data point. The reactivity of control, naïve horse IgG to each venom was consistently low at each dilution for each venom (mean OD 405 nm = 0.07 ± 0.005). For interested readers, the same data as in Fig 3 is presented in Supplementary S1 Fig to facilely compare binding to each of the six venoms.
Fig 4The relative IgG-venom binding avidity of six commercial antivenoms against six sub-Saharan Africa venoms determined by chaotropic ELISA.
1:1,000 dilutions of 5 mg/ml standardized antivenoms were allowed to bind to venom coated plates before being exposed to NH4SCN at increasing concentrations for 15 minutes. Panel (A) = SAIMR polyvalent, (B) = SAIMR ECHIS CARINATUS, (C) = Sanofi Pasteur, (D) = VINS (E) = INOSAN, (F) = Premium Serums & Vaccines (PS&V) antivenoms. Venoms: B. arietans (blue), E.p. leakeyi (red), N. nigricollis (green), N. pallida (purple), N. haje (orange) and D. polylepis (black). Results are the mean of three replicates with error bars representing standard deviation (SD). Error bars are not shown where SD is smaller than data point. The reactivity of control, naïve horse IgG to each venom was consistently low at each dilution for each venom (mean OD 405 nm = 0.05 ± 0.004). For interested readers, the same data as in Fig 4 is presented in Supplementary S2 Fig to facilely compare binding to each of the six venoms.
Fig 5The IgG specificities of six commercial antivenoms to venom proteins of six sub-Saharan Africa venoms.
Venoms (10 μg) of B. arietans, E. p. leakeyi, N. nigricollis, N. pallida, N. haje and D. polylepis were separated by reduced SDS-PAGE and visualised by coomassie blue staining (Panel A). Venom proteins in identical gels were transferred to nitrocellulose blots and incubated with 1:5,000 dilutions of naïve Horse IgG (B), the ‘gold standard’ SAIMR polyvalent (C) and SAIMR ECHIS CARINATUS (D) antivenoms, and the ‘test’ Sanofi Pasteur (E), VINS (F), INOSAN (G) and Premium Serums & Vaccines (H) antivenoms. The antivenoms were not standardised to 5 mg/ml as in the ELISA assays.
The concentration of protein (F(ab’)2-fragment of IgG) in each vial of antivenom.
| Antivenom Brand | mg/ml |
|---|---|
| PS&V—PAN AFRICA polyvalent | 63.3 ± 6.2 |
| VINS—Pan African | 21.7 ± 2.4 |
| INOSAN—Inoserp PANAFRICAIN | 31.7 ± 6.2 |
| Sanofi—FavAfrique | 96.7 ± 12.5 |
| SAVP—SAIMR Polyvalent | 111.7 ± 27.2 |
| SAVP—SAIMR Echis monovalent | 71.7 ± 27.2 |
Costs to Kenya hospitals of antivenoms (purchased through Mission for essential drugs & supplies (US$1 = Kshs 101.8; Feb 2016).
| Antivenom Brand | US$/vial |
|---|---|
| PS&V—PAN AFRICA polyvalent | $83.5 |
| VINS—Pan African | $47.9 |
| INOSAN—Inoserp PANAFRICAIN | $105.1 |
| Sanofi—FavAfrique | $99 |
| SAVP—SAIMR Polyvalent | $315 |
| SAVP—SAIMR Echis monovalent | $315 |