Antivenom efficacy or effectiveness: the Australian experience.

Toxicology

Department of Clinical Toxicology and Pharmacology, Calvary Mater Newcastle, Newcastle, New South Wales, Australia.

Published: February 2010

AI Article Synopsis

  • Antivenoms are widely used but their clinical effectiveness is still debated; research largely relies on lab and observational studies rather than direct clinical outcomes.
  • *Some antivenoms show clear benefits for specific envenomings, yet issues of quality and effectiveness remain, and it's crucial to differentiate between efficacy (lab conditions) and effectiveness (real-world outcomes).
  • *Recent studies challenge the effectiveness of certain antivenoms in humans, indicating various factors that may contribute to antivenom failure, suggesting the need for further research into venom effects and antivenom administration.*

Article Abstract

Despite widespread use of antivenoms, many questions remain about their effectiveness in the clinical setting. The almost universal acceptance of their value is based mainly on in vitro studies, animal studies and human observational studies. Numerous examples exist where they demonstrate clear benefit, such as consumption coagulopathy in viper envenoming, prevention of neurotoxicity in Australasian elapid bites, systemic effects in scorpion and funnel-web spider envenoming. There are also concerns about the quality and efficacy of some antivenoms. However, it is important not to confuse the efficacy of antivenom, defined as its ability to bind and neutralise venom-mediated effects under ideal conditions, and the effectiveness of antivenom, defined as its ability to reverse or prevent envenoming in human cases. There are numerous potential reasons for antivenom failure in human envenoming, of which antivenom inefficacy is only one. Other important reasons include venom-mediated effects being irreversible, antivenom being unable to reach the site of toxin-mediated injury, or the rapidity of onset of venom-mediated effects. A number of recent studies in Australia bring into question the effectiveness of some antivenoms, including snake antivenom for coagulopathy, redback spider and box jellyfish antivenoms. Despite brown snake antivenom being able to neutralise venom induced clotting in vitro, use of the antivenom in human envenoming does not appear to change the time course of coagulopathy. However, it is important that apparent antivenom ineffectiveness in specific cases is correctly interpreted and does not lead to a universal belief that antivenom is ineffective. It should rather encourage further studies to investigate the underlying pathophysiology of envenoming, the pharmacokinetics of venoms and antivenoms, and ultimately the effectiveness of antivenom based on snake type, clinical effects and timing of administration.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.tox.2009.09.013DOI Listing

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