Publications by authors named "Mauricio Seigelchifer"

The disease named COVID-19, caused by the SARS-CoV-2 coronavirus, is currently generating a global pandemic. Vaccine development is no doubt the best long-term immunological approach, but in the current epidemiologic and health emergency there is a need for rapid and effective solutions. Convalescent plasma is the only antibody-based therapy available for COVID-19 patients to date.

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Background: RTXM83 is a rituximab biosimilar with proven clinical safety and efficacy. It is the first rituximab biosimilar developed and approved in South America and is currently marketed in several Latin American, Middle Eastern and African countries.

Objective: The aim of this study was to present the physicochemical and biological characterization studies utilized to demonstrate the similarity between RTXM83 and its reference product.

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Objectives: In this open-label, non-randomized phase II study, the safety and immunogenicity of a fully liquid diphtheria-tetanus-whole cell pertussis-hepatitis B-Haemophilus influenzae type b (DTPw-HepB-Hib) combination vaccine (Quinvaxem(®)) were assessed in infants who had or had not received a birth dose of hepatitis B (HepB) vaccine.

Study Design: Two groups of infants, 'HepB at birth' (n=110) and 'no HepB at birth' (n=108), were enrolled and received a primary vaccination course using a 2-4-6 months schedule.

Results: Seroprotection/seroconversion rates of >95% were achieved against all antigens included in the combination vaccine for both study groups.

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A randomised trial was conducted in 285 adults not immune to hepatitis B (HB) to compare the safety and immunogenicity of a commercial aluminium-adjuvanted HB vaccine with and without an additional new adjuvant (AgB/RC-210-04 or AgB study groups, respectively). The additional adjuvant RC-529 is a fully synthetic monosaccharide mimetic of monophosphoryl lipid A. Subjects in the AgB/RC-210-04 (n=136) and AgB (n=149) groups were vaccinated intramuscularly on days 0, 30, and 180, according to the standard vaccination schedule for hepatitis B vaccines.

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Background: UV radiation can produce mutations in skin cells and correlates strongly with the onset of actinic keratoses and basal and squamous cell carcinomas. Xeroderma pigmentosum (XP) is a heritable disease characterized by an extreme sensitivity of skin to UV radiation. Recently, studies in cultured cells as well as in XP patients have demonstrated that the recombinant T4 endonuclease V UV-specific endonuclease could enhance repair of UV-induced photoproducts.

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