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In vitro preclinical testing of nonoxynol-9 as potential anti-human immunodeficiency virus microbicide: a retrospective analysis of results from five laboratories

  1. Author:
    Beer, B. E.
    Doncel, G. F.
    Krebs, F. C.
    Shattock, R. J.
    Fletcher, P. S.
    Buckheit, R. W.
    Watson, K.
    Dezzutti, C. S.
    Cummins, J. E.
    Bromley, E.
    Richardson-Harman, N.
    Pallansch, L. A.
    Lackman-Smith, C.
    Osterling, C.
    Mankowski, M.
    Miller, S. R.
    Catalone, B. J.
    Welsh, P. A.
    Howett, M. K.
    Wigdahl, B.
    Turpin, J. A.
    Reichelderfer, P.
  2. Author Address

    So Res Inst, Frederick, MD 21701 USA. Eastern Virginia Med Sch, CONRAD, Norfolk, VA USA. Drexel Univ, Coll Med, Dept Microbiol & Immunol, Philadelphia, PA 19129 USA. Drexel Univ, Coll Med, Inst Mol Med & Infect Dis, Philadelphia, PA 19129 USA. Univ London, London, England. Imquest BioSci Inc, Frederick, MD USA. Ctr Dis Control & Prevent, Atlanta, GA USA. BioStat Solut Inc, Airy, MD USA. Penn State Univ, Coll Med, Dept Microbiol & Immunol, Hershey, PA 17033 USA. Drexel Univ, Dept Biosci & Biotechnol, Philadelphia, PA 19104 USA. Natl Inst Allergy & Infect Dis, Div AIDS, NIH, Bethesda, MD USA. Natl Inst Child Hlth & Human Dev, NIH, Bethesda, MD USA.;Beer, BE, So Res Inst, 431 Aviat Way, Frederick, MD 21701 USA.;beer@sri.org
    1. Year: 2006
    2. Date: Feb
  1. Journal: Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy
    1. 50
    2. 2
    3. Pages: 713-723
  2. Type of Article: Article
  3. ISSN: 0066-4804
  1. Abstract:

    The first product to be clinically evaluated as a microbicide contained the nonionic surfactant nonoxynol-9 (nonylphenoxypolyethoxyethanol; N-9). Many laboratories have used N-9 as a control compound for microbicide assays. However, no published comparisons of the results among laboratories or attempts to establish standardized protocols for preclinical testing of microbicides have been performed. In this study, we compared results from 127 N-9 toxicity and 72 efficacy assays that were generated in five different laboratories over the last six years and were performed with 14 different cell lines or tissues. Intra-assay reproducibility was measured at two-, three-, and fivefold differences using standard deviations. Interassay reproducibility was assessed using general linear models, and interaction between variables was studied using step-wise regression. The intra-assay reproducibility within the same N-9 concentration, cell type, assay duration, and laboratory was consistent at the twofold level of standard deviations. For interassay reproducibility, cell line, duration of assay, and N-9 concentration were all significant sources of variability (P < 0.01). Half-maximal toxicity concentrations for N-9 were similar between laboratories for assays of similar exposure durations, but these similarities decreased with lower test concentrations of N-9. Results for both long (> 24 h) and short (< 2 h) exposures of cells to N-9 showed variability, while assays with 4 to 8 h of N-9 exposure gave results that were not significantly different. This is the first analysis to compare preclinical N-9 toxicity levels that were obtained by different laboratories using various protocols. This comparative work can be used to develop standardized microbicide testing protocols that will help advance potential microbicides to clinical trials.

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External Sources

  1. DOI: 10.1128/aac.50.2.713-723.2006
  2. WOS: 000235294200042

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