To assess safety and efficacy of high-dose intravenous immunoglobulin therapy in patients with primary immunodeficiency syndromes we treated a group of 19 patients with a monthly dose of 400 mg/kg of reduced and alkylated, maltose-containing immunoglobulin (Gamimune, Cutter Biological, Berkeley, California) and compared their responses with a group of 16 patients receiving 100 mg/kg per month intravenously. Side effects observed were mild to moderately severe and similar in both groups. In one adult patient receiving the high dose a severe enough reaction developed during the first infusion to exclude her from the study. Serum IgG levels of patients receiving high-dose immunoglobulin showed a stepwise increase in both trough and peak values until a new plateau was reached after four to six infusions. None of the patients receiving the low dose showed such a stepwise increase. On average, serum IgG levels rose by approximately 250 mg/dl for each 100 mg/kg immunoglobulin infused. The mean catabolic rate of the infused IgG was estimated to be 26 days in patients receiving high-dose immunoglobulin infusions. We demonstrated that 400 mg/kg immunoglobulin given intravenously every four weeks to patients with immunodeficiency results in a substantial increase in serum IgG during the postinfusion period, suggesting persistence of specific antibody throughout the interval between infusions.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/0002-9343(84)90324-3 | DOI Listing |
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