Litcius/Paper detail

Monoclonal antibodies against rabies: current uses in prophylaxis and in therapy

Guilherme Dias de Melo, Jan Hellert, Rajesh Gupta, Davide Corti, Hervé Bourhy

2022Current Opinion in Virology70 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Rabies is a severe viral infection that causes an acute encephalomyelitis, which presents a case fatality of nearly 100% after the manifestation of neurological clinical signs. Rabies can be efficiently prevented with post-exposure prophylaxis (PEP), composed of vaccines and anti-rabies immunoglobulins (RIGs); however, no treatment exists for symptomatic rabies. The PEP protocol faces access and implementation obstacles in resource-limited settings, which could be partially overcome by substituting RIGs for monoclonal antibodies (mAbs). mAbs offer lower production costs, consistent supply availability, long-term storage/stability, and an improved safety profile. Here we summarize the key features of the different available mAbs against rabies, focusing on their application in PEP and highlighting their potential in a novel therapeutic approach.

Topics & Concepts

RabiesMonoclonal antibodyVirologyBiologyPost-exposure prophylaxisRabies virusImmunologyRabies vaccineAntibodyIntensive care medicineMedicineRabies epidemiology and controlViral Infections and Outbreaks ResearchStreptococcal Infections and Treatments