Stabilization of botulinum toxin type A during lyophilization

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Abstract

Botulinum toxin for medical use is diluted to very low concentrations (nanograms per milliliter); when it is preserved by lyophilization, considerable loss of activity can occur. In the present study, conditions that gave >90% recovery of the toxicity after lyophilization of solutions containing 20 to 1,000 mouse 50% lethal doses per ml were found. Toxicity was recovered upon drying 0.1 ml of toxin solution when the pH was maintained below 7 and bovine or human serum albumins were used as stabilizers. Various other substances tested with albumin, including glucose, sucrose, trehalose, mannitol, glycine, and cellibiose, did not increase recovery on drying.

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Goodnough, M. C., & Johnson, E. A. (1992). Stabilization of botulinum toxin type A during lyophilization. Applied and Environmental Microbiology. https://doi.org/10.1128/aem.58.10.3426-3428.1992

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