Treatment of severe pertussis: a study of the safety and pharmacology of intravenous pertussis immunoglobulin
- 1 June 1999
- journal article
- clinical trial
- Published by Wolters Kluwer Health in The Pediatric Infectious Disease Journal
- Vol. 18 (6) , 505-511
- https://doi.org/10.1097/00006454-199906000-00006
Abstract
Pertussis in infants is often severe, resulting in complications and prolonged hospitalization. Treatment is limited to supportive care. Antibiotics do not significantly alter the course of the disease. Therapies directed at pertussis toxin, a major virulence factor of Bordetella pertussis, might be beneficial. This study examines the safety and pharmacology of intravenous pertussis immunoglobulin (P-IGIV), which has high levels of pertussis toxin antibodies. P-IGIV was prepared as a 4% IgG solution from the pooled plasma from donors immunized with inactivated pertussis toxoid. The IgG pertussis toxin antibody concentration of 733 μg/ml is >7-fold higher than contained in conventional intravenous immunoglobulin products. Children with presumptive pertussis were allocated to one of three treatment doses of P-IGIV. Twenty-six of 30 enrolled children had confirmed pertussis. There were no adverse events associated with P-IGIV except one patient who had transient hypotension that responded to an infusion rate decrease. P-IGIV doses of 1500, 750 and 250 mg/kg achieved ≥4-fold, ≥3-fold and >2-fold rises in peak geometric mean titers of pertussis toxin IgG antibodies, respectively. P-IGIV exhibited a half-life of 38.4 days and a volume of distribution of 87.8 ml/kg. All three treatment groups showed declines in lymphocytosis (P P-IGIV is safe and achieves high pertussis toxin antibody titers in infants. This study provides data for a prospective, controlled trial of P-IGIV.Keywords
This publication has 29 references indexed in Scilit:
- Specific immunoglobulin for treatment of whooping coughThe Lancet, 1991
- Safety and immunogenicity of hydrogen peroxide-inactivated pertussis toxoid in 18-month-old childrenVaccine, 1991
- Protective Activities of the Filamentous Hemagglutinin and the Lymphocytosis-Promoting Factor of Bordetella pertussis in MiceThe Journal of Infectious Diseases, 1984
- High-dose intravenous gammaglobulin therapy for passive immune thrombocytopenia in the neonateThe Journal of Pediatrics, 1983
- UPTAKE OF IgG AFTER INTRAMUSCULAR AND SUBCUTANEOUS INJECTIONThe Lancet, 1972
- Treatment of pertussis with pertussis immune globulinThe Journal of Pediatrics, 1971
- Failure of Hyperimmune Gamma Globulin to Prevent Whooping CoughArchives of Disease in Childhood, 1957
- The treatment of pertussis with lyophile hyperimmune human pertussis serumThe Journal of Pediatrics, 1944
- Hyperimmune whooping cough serumThe Journal of Pediatrics, 1944
- The production and use of hyperimmune human whooping cough serumThe Journal of Pediatrics, 1940