RESUMO
A sudden, unprecedented failure of USP rabbit pyrogen tests for multiple 10% IGIV-C lots prompted a thorough investigation of the root cause for this phenomenon. All microbe-related testing, including Limulus amebocyte lysate test for endotoxin, proved negative, and no deficiencies were discovered in manufacturing. Plasma pool composition analysis revealed that a single plasma donor ("Donor Xâ³) was common to all pyrogenic IGIV-C lots and that as little as one unit of "Donor Xâ³ plasma (in a pool of â¼4500 units) was sufficient to cause IGIV-C lot failure in the USP rabbit pyrogen test. Whole plasma and Protein A-purified IgG from "Donor Xâ³ caused a temperature increase in rabbits; however, all IgG samples tested pyrogen-negative in two in vitro cell-based pyrogen tests. Flow cytometry showed that "Donor Xâ³ IgG bound strongly to rabbit white blood cells (WBC) but minimally to human WBC. Exclusion of "Donor Xâ³ plasma from manufacturing marked the end of IGIV-C lots registering positive in the USP rabbit pyrogen test. This failure of multiple 10% IGIV-C lots to pass the USP rabbit pyrogen test was demonstrated to be due to the highly unusual anti-rabbit-leukocyte specificity of IgG from a single donor.