ASSESSMENT OF POTENCY OF TUBERCULIN IN HUMANS AND GUINEA-PIGS

  • 1 January 1964
    • journal article
    • research article
    • Vol. 31 (2), 171-+
Abstract
The biological effects of tuberculin in an organism infected with tubercle bacilli are due to an unknown number of different substances, which are present in varying concentrations in different tuberculin preparations. Consequently, the response to tuberculin tests with various products is likely to vary with the biological material, the test technique, the tuberculin dose, etc., and potency estimates of tuberculin products will depend to a considerable extent on how the assessment is made. The present paper describes an experiment in which this dependence was demonstrated in the case of two purified protein derivative tuberculin preparations (RT 23 and PPD-Weybridge). The potency ratio of these products was found to vary widely according to whether it was determined in humans by the Pirquet test of in guinea-pigs by the Mantoux test, and the authors therefore conclude that tuberculin products must be assessed under the conditions in which they will subsequently be used.