Inactivation of 12 viruses by heating steps applied during manufacture of a hepatitis B vaccine

The efficacy of two heating cycles (90 sec at 103°C and 10 hr at 65°C) used during manufacture of a plasma‐derived hepatitis‐B vaccine was validated for the inactivation of 12 virus families. A period of 15 min warming up to 65°C had already completely inactivated representatives of nine virus famil...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of medical virology 1987-11, Vol.23 (3), p.297-301
Hauptverfasser: Lelie, P. N., Reesink, H. W., Lucas, C. J.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:The efficacy of two heating cycles (90 sec at 103°C and 10 hr at 65°C) used during manufacture of a plasma‐derived hepatitis‐B vaccine was validated for the inactivation of 12 virus families. A period of 15 min warming up to 65°C had already completely inactivated representatives of nine virus families, ie, poxvirus (vaccinia), picornavirus (encephalomyocarditis virus), togavirus (sind bis virus), coronavirus (mouse hepatitis virus), orthomyxovirus (influenza virus), rhabdovirus (vesicular stomatitis virus), herpes virus (cytomegalovirus), lentivirus (human immunodeficiency virus), and retrovirus (murine leukemia virus). After prolonged heating at 65°C or heating for 90 sec at 103°C, parvovirus (canine parvovirus) and the phage phiX174 were also completely inactivated. Papovavirus represented by simian virus 40 (SV‐40) was the most heat‐resistant virus evaluated. The infectivity of SV‐40 was reduced by 104 Tissue Culture Infectious Doses (TCID50) per ml after 90 sec at 103°C, but a marginal residual activity (
ISSN:0146-6615
1096-9071
DOI:10.1002/jmv.1890230313