Bothrofav, a monospecific antivenom, was introduced in June 1991 and has shown excellent effectiveness against life-threatening and thrombotic complications of envenoming. Because of the reoccurrence of cerebral stroke events despite the timely administration of antivenom, new batches of Bothrofav were produced and introduced into clinical use in January 2011. This study's aim was to evaluate the effectiveness of Bothrofav generations at treating envenoming. During the first period of the study (2000-2010), 107 patients were treated with vials of antivenom produced in June 1991, while 282 envenomed patients were treated with vials of antivenom produced in January 2011 in the second study period (2011-2023). Despite timely antivenom administration, thrombotic complications reoccurred after an interval free of thrombotic events, and a timeframe analysis suggested that the clinical efficacy of Bothrofav declined after it reached its 10-year shelf-life. In of the case of an antivenom shortage due to the absence of regular batch production, no adverse effects were identified before the antivenom reached its 10-year shelf-life, which is beyond the accepted shelf-life for a liquid-formulation antivenom. While our study does not support the use of expired antivenom for potent, life-threatening envenoming, it can be a scientific message to public entities proving the necessity of new antivenom production for envenoming.

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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10976126PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/toxins16030146DOI Listing

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