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. Author manuscript; available in PMC: 2023 May 20.
Published in final edited form as: Vaccine. 2022 Apr 22;40(23):3244–3252. doi: 10.1016/j.vaccine.2022.03.053

Figure 3. Immune response and the persistence of oxycodone specific antibodies.

Figure 3.

Male (M) and female (F) Sprague Dawley rats received four IM injections of either alum adjuvant (Group 1; M1 or F1), 1.43 (Group 2; M2 or F2), or 68 (Groups 3 and 4; M3 or F3 and M4 or F4, respectively) μg/animal Oxy(Gly)4-sKLH vaccine on Days 1, 15, 29, and 43 of the study. A) Oxycodone-specific serum IgG antibody titers were evaluated by ELISA on Day 50 for 10 animals per sex per group. B) Following oxycodone challenge 5 animals per sex from Groups 1 (M1-R or F1-R) and 3 (M3-R or F3-R) were allowed 4 weeks recovery and their oxycodone-specific serum IgG antibody titers were evaluated on Day 87 of the study. Difference in antibodies titers compared to the control from Day 50 (panel A) were analyzed using a Brown-Forsythe and Welch ANOVA with Tukey’s multiple comparison post-hoc test. Recovery Group 3 titers from Day 87 (panel B) were compared to Group 1 titers using a Welch’s t-test. Comparisons between Day 50 and Day 87 titers for Group 3 were made using a paired t-test with the paired Day 50 and Day 87 data from the same animals. Data are presented as mean ± SEM with individual animal responses shown. Statistical symbols (brackets indicate significance between groups): **: p≤0.01, ***: p≤0.001 compared to the gender matched Group 1, ns=not significant compared to gender and group matched Day 50 and Day 87 time points.