Author:
Rojas-Jiménez Gabriel,Solano Daniela,Segura Álvaro,Sánchez Andrés,Chaves-Araya Stephanie,Herrera María,Vargas Mariángela,Cerdas Maykel,Calvo Gerardo,Alfaro Jonathan,Molina Sebastián,Bolaños Kimberly,Moreira-Soto Andrés,Villalta Mauren,Sánchez Adriana,Cordero Daniel,Durán Gina,Solano Gabriela,Gómez Aarón,Hernández Andrés,Sánchez Laura,Vargas Marco,Drexler Jean Felix,Alape-Girón Alberto,Díaz Cecilia,León Guillermo
Abstract
Despite vaccines are the main strategy to control the ongoing global COVID-19 pandemic, their effectiveness could not be enough for individuals with immunosuppression. In these cases, as well as in patients with moderate/severe COVID-19, passive immunization with anti-SARS-CoV-2 immunoglobulins could be a therapeutic alternative. We used caprylic acid precipitation to prepare a pilot-scale batch of anti-SARS-CoV-2 intravenous immunoglobulins (IVIg) from plasma of donors immunized with the BNT162b2 (Pfizer-BioNTech) anti-COVID-19 vaccine (VP-IVIg) and compared their in vitro efficacy and safety with those of a similar formulation produced from plasma of COVID-19 convalescent donors (CP-IVIg). Both formulations showed immunological, physicochemical, biochemical, and microbiological characteristics that meet the specifications of IVIg formulations. Moreover, the concentration of anti-RBD and ACE2-RBD neutralizing antibodies was higher in VP-IVIg than in CP-IVIg. In concordance, plaque reduction neutralization tests showed inhibitory concentrations of 0.03–0.09 g/L in VP-IVIg and of 0.06–0.13 in CP-IVIg. Thus, VP-IVIg has in vitro efficacy and safety profiles that justify their evaluation as therapeutic alternative for clinical cases of COVID-19. Precipitation with caprylic acid could be a simple, feasible, and affordable alternative to produce formulations of anti-SARS-CoV-2 IVIg to be used therapeutically or prophylactically to confront the COVID-19 pandemic in middle and low-income countries.
Cited by
6 articles.
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