The effect on the safety of intravenous immunoglobulin of testing plasma for antibody to hepatitis C

Abstract
The safety of intravenous immunoglobulin (IGIV), manufactured from units testing negative for antibody to hepatitis C virus (anti-HCV), was investigated. A study involving five chimpanzees was performed to determine whether the safety of IGIV would be compromised if units of plasma that reacted for anti-HCV were withheld from pools from which IGIV is manufactured. In the first phase of the experiment, two chimpanzees were infused with 25 mL per kg of unprocessed, pooled plasma from 2887 donors who did not react for anti-HCV in single-antigen (c100-3) enzyme-linked immunosorbent assays. In the second phase, each of three chimpanzees was infused with 1000 mg per kg of IGIV manufactured from the same plasma units. The immunoglobulin was made by seven United States-licensed manufacturers, each using its own approved method. Each chimpanzee received an equal dose of each manufacturer's IGIV. The two chimpanzees that received anti-c100-3-nonreactive, unprocessed pooled plasma became infected with HCV. The three chimpanzees infused with IGIV did not show any evidence of infection with HCV 15 months after inoculation. Two of these animals were challenged with human non-A,non-B hepatitis-infectious plasma, and both subsequently showed evidence of HCV infection. These studies demonstrate that, as determined by infectivity for chimpanzees, 1) the withholding of plasma units that react for anti-c100-3 from pools from which plasma products are manufactured does not render the source material noninfectious, and 2) the safety of IGIV manufactured from such plasma pools is not compromised by withholding the units that react for anti-c100-3.