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On the role of excipients in biopharmaceuticals manufacture: Modelling-guided formulation identifies the protective effect of arginine hydrochloride excipient on spray-dried Olipudase alfa recombinant protein

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posted on 2024-08-12, 11:10 authored by Ashutosh SharmaAshutosh Sharma, Pierre-Andre CazadePierre-Andre Cazade, Dikshitkumar Khamar, Ambrose Hayden, Damien ThompsonDamien Thompson, Helen Hughes

Biopharmaceuticals are labile biomolecules that must be safeguarded to ensure the safety, quality, and efficacy of the product. Batch freeze-drying is an established means of manufacturing solid biopharmaceuticals but alternative technologies such as spray-drying may be more suitable for continuous manufacturing of inhalable bio-pharmaceuticals. Here we assessed the feasibility of spray-drying Olipudase alfa, a novel parenteral therapeutic enzyme, by evaluating some of its critical quality attributes (CQAs) in a range of excipients, namely, trehalose, arginine (Arg), and arginine hydrochloride (Arg-HCl) in the sucrose/methionine base formulation. The Arg-HCl excipient produced the best gain in CQAs of spray-dried Olipudase with a 63% reduction in reconstitution time and 83% reduction in the optical density of the solution. Molecular dynamics simulations revealed the atomic-scale mechanism of the protein–excipient interactions, substantiating the experimental results. The Arg-HCl effect was explained by the calculated thermal stability and structural order of the protein wherein Arg-HCl acted as a crowding agent to suppress protein aggregation and promote stabilization of Olipudase post-spray-drying. Therefore, by rational selection of appropriate excipients, our experimental and modelling dataset confirms spray-drying is a promising technology for the manufacture of Olipudase and demonstrates the potential to accelerate development of continuous manufacturing of parenteral biopharmaceuticals.

Funding

SSPC_Phase 2

Science Foundation Ireland

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History

Publication

International Journal of Pharmaceutics 662, 124466

Publisher

Elsevier

Other Funding information

South East Technological University (SETU), Waterford—Sanofi Waterford Co-fund PhD Scholarship Program (Ashutosh Sharma), the Irish Research Council—Enterprise Partnership Scheme (Project ID: EPSPG/2020/56), and the Higher Education Authority (HEA)—COVID-19 costed extension by the Department of Further and Higher Education

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  • Bernal Institute

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  • Physics

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