Cold Ethanol Fractionation and Heat Inactivation of Hepatitis A Virus During Manufacture of Albumin from Human Plasma
Cold Ethanol Fractionation and Heat Inactivation of Hepatitis A Virus During Manufacture of Albumin from Human Plasma
- 한국생물공학회
- Biotechnology and Bioprocess Engineering:BBE
- Vol.9 No.1
- 2004.01
- 65 - 68 (4 pages)
The purpose of the present study was to examine the efficacy and mechanism of fraction IV cold ethanol fractionation and pasteurization (60$^{\circ}C$ heat treatment for 10 h), involved in the manufacture of albumin from human plasma, in the removal and/or inactivation of the hepatitis A virus (HAV). Samples from the relevant stages of the production process were spiked with HAV and the amount of virus in each fraction then quantified using a 50% tissue culture infectious dose (TCID$\_$50/). HAV was effectively partitioned from albumin during the fraction IV cold ethanol fractionation with a log reduction factor of 3.43. Pasteurization was also found to be a robust and effective step in inactivating HAV, where the titers were reduced from an initial titer of 7.60 log TCID$\_$50/ to undetectable levels within 5 h of treatment. The log reduction factor achieved during pasteurization was $\geq$4.76. Therefore, the current results indicate that the production process for albumin has sufficient HAV reducing capacity to achieve a high margin of virus safety.