Emerging Infectious Diseases (Nov 2019)

Lack of Efficacy of High-Titered Immunoglobulin in Patients with West Nile Virus Central Nervous System Disease

  • John W. Gnann,
  • Amy Agrawal,
  • John Hart,
  • Martha Buitrago,
  • Paul Carson,
  • Diane Hanfelt-Goade,
  • Ken Tyler,
  • Jared Spotkov,
  • Alison Freifeld,
  • Thomas Moore,
  • Jorge Reyno,
  • Henry Masur,
  • Penelope Jester,
  • Ilet Dale,
  • Yufeng Li,
  • Inmaculada Aban,
  • Fred D. Lakeman,
  • Richard J. Whitley

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3201/eid2511.190537
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 25, no. 11
pp. 2064 – 2073

Abstract

Read online

West Nile Virus (WNV) can result in clinically severe neurologic disease. There is no treatment for WNV infection, but administration of anti-WNV polyclonal human antibody has demonstrated efficacy in animal models. We compared Omr-IgG-am, an immunoglobulin product with high titers of anti-WNV antibody, with intravenous immunoglobulin (IVIG) and normal saline to assess safety and efficacy in patients with WNV neuroinvasive disease as part of a phase I/II, randomized, double-blind, multicenter study in North America. During 2003–2006, a total of 62 hospitalized patients were randomized to receive Omr-IgG-am, standard IVIG, or normal saline (3:1:1). The primary endpoint was medication safety. Secondary endpoints were morbidity and mortality, measured using 4 standardized assessments of cognitive and functional status. The death rate in the study population was 12.9%. No significant differences were found between groups receiving Omr-IgG-am compared with IVIG or saline for either the safety or efficacy endpoints.

Keywords