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Effect of Gamma Irradiation on the Human Immunodeficiency Virus and Human Coagulation Proteins

130

Citations

20

References

1989

Year

Abstract

The effect of gamma irradiation on HIV and plasma coagulation factors F VIII:C, F VIII:vWF and FIX was studied. Donor plasma was harvested from single donations, frozen and irradiated in the frozen state at target doses from 0 to 40 kGy (0-4 mRad). HIV was inoculated into human plasma and irradiated in a similar manner. A range of other viruses, not suspended in plasma, were also irradiated to establish viral inactivation. An inactivation rate of 0.164 TCID50 dose/ml/kGy was demonstrated for HIV compared to rates of 0.00173, 0.00526 and 0.00286 log10 units/ml/kGy for F VIII:C,F VIII:vWF and FIX respectively. The use of gamma irradiation to inactivate infectious agents present in human plasma may eliminate the need for any post-production viral inactivation methods and provide a means of assuring the safety of as yet untreated products such as cryoprecipitate and fresh frozen plasma.

References

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