African polyvalent antivenom can maintain pharmacological stability and ability to neutralise murine venom lethality for decades post-expiry: evidence for increasing antivenom shelf life to aid in alleviating chronic shortages

Author:

Solano Gabriela,Cunningham Sinead,Edge Rebecca J,Duran Gina,Sanchez Adriana,Villalta Mauren,Clare Rachel H,Wilkinson Mark C,Marriott Amy E,Abada Camille,Menzies Stefanie K,Keen Molly,Lalloo David G,Stienstra Ymkje,Abouyannis Michael,Casewell Nicholas R,León Guillermo,Ainsworth StuartORCID

Abstract

IntroductionAntivenom is a lifesaving medicine for treating snakebite envenoming, yet there has been a crisis in antivenom supply for many decades. Despite this, substantial quantities of antivenom stocks expire before use. This study has investigated whether expired antivenoms retain preclinical quality and efficacy, with the rationale that they could be used in emergency situations when in-date antivenom is unavailable.MethodsUsing WHO guidelines and industry test requirements, we examined the in vitro stability and murine in vivo efficacy of eight batches of the sub-Saharan African antivenom, South African Institute for Medical Research polyvalent, that had expired at various times over a period of 30 years.ResultsWe demonstrate modest declines in immunochemical stability, with antivenoms older than 25 years having high levels of turbidity. In vitro preclinical analysis demonstrated all expired antivenoms retained immunological recognition of venom antigens and the ability to inhibit key toxin families. All expired antivenoms retained comparable in vivo preclinical efficacy in preventing the lethal effects of envenoming in mice versus three regionally and medically important venoms.ConclusionsThis study provides strong rationale for stakeholders, including manufacturers, regulators and health authorities, to explore the use of expired antivenom more broadly, to aid in alleviating critical shortages in antivenom supply in the short term and the extension of antivenom shelf life in the longer term.

Funder

Liverpool School of Tropical Medicine

UK Research and Innovation

Vicerrectoría de Investigación, Universidad de Costa Rica

Wellcome Trust

Publisher

BMJ

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5. Antivenom shortage is not circumstantial but structural

Cited by 2 articles. 订阅此论文施引文献 订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献

1. Long-term stability or degradation of drugs and pharmaceutical products: state-of-the-art;Monatshefte für Chemie - Chemical Monthly;2024-08-06

2. Debate-Con: Use of expired antivenoms: a flawed good idea;Emergency Medicine Journal;2024-06-06

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