Abstract
In the production of bone grafts intended for transplantation, basic safety measures to avoid the transmission of pathogens are selection and serological screening of donors for markers of virus infections. As an additional safety tool we investigated the effect of gamma irradiation on the sterility of human bone diaphysis transplants and evaluated its impact on the virus safety of transplants. Model viruses were included in the study to determine the dose necessary to achieve a reduction factor for the infectivity titres of at least 4log10 at a temperature of −30±5°C. The following viruses were used: human immunodeficiency virus type 2 (HIV-2), hepatitis A virus (HAV), and poliovirus (PV-1), and the following model viruses: pseudorabies virus (PRV) as a model for human herpesviruses, bovine viral diarrhoea virus (BVDV) for HCV, and bovine parvovirus (BPV) for parvovirus B19. A first approach was to determine the D10 values (kGy) for the different viruses (virus inactivation kinetics: BPV 7·3; PV-1 7·1; HIV-2 7·1; HAV 5·3; PRV 5·3; BVDV <3·0kGy). Based on these results, inactivation of these viruses was studied in experimentally contaminated human bone transplants (femoral diaphyses). For BPV, the most resistant one of the viruses studied, a dose of approximately 34kGy was necessary to achieve a reduction of infectivity titres of 4log10. We therefore recommend a dose of 34kGy for the sterilisation of frozen bone transplants.Copyright 2002 The International Association for Biologicals. Published by Elsevier Science Ltd. All rights reserved .
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