3.8 Article

Alternative methods for potency evaluation for Bothrops venom and antivenom: applications and perspectives for quality control

Journal

Publisher

FUNDACAO OSWALDO CRUZ, INST NACIONAL CONTROLE QUALIDADE & SAUDE
DOI: 10.22239/2317-269x.02055

Keywords

Alternative Methods; Bothrops Venom; Bothrops Antivenom; Quality Control

Ask authors/readers for more resources

This article summarizes alternative methods developed for Bothrops antivenoms and evaluates their potential applications in Bothrops venom and antivenom production and quality control laboratories. The study found that using cell lines as an alternative method to murine assays has been widely preferred and considered as an important tool for quality control of Bothrops venom and antivenom.
Introduction:Accidents with venomous animals are classified as neglected tropical diseases and are currently the most frequent cause of intoxication in humans in Brazil. The only available treatment is the rapid administration of specific, quality-assured antivenoms. To ensure the efficacy and safety of these products, in vivo potency determination tests for venom and antivenom are performed during the production stages, until final release. Despite several studies on alternative methods to the murine assay, no method has been effectively validated. Objective: To compile alternative methods developed for Bothrops antivenoms, assessing the availability of the methods and the prospects and applications in Bothrops venom and antivenom production and quality control laboratories. Method: A search was conducted in PubMed, BVS, and Scopus databases between November 2021 and June 2022. 89 articles were identified, of which 31 were selected according to the eligibility criteria. Results: We observed in the alternative methods identified a preference of 42.80% of the studies for methodologies that use cell lines as an alternative method to the murine assays, and most of these works (58.30%) opted for a VERO cell line. Conclusions: Due to the diversity of toxins found in each genus of snakes, it is understood that the potency assay for antivenoms should be based on the evaluation and precise quantification of the inhibition of biological activity of venoms. Cytotoxicity assays are widely used and have been accumulating evidence of their suitability as an important alternative tool to the murine assay for quality control for Bothrops venom and antivenom.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

3.8
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available