| Literature DB >> 33035539 |
Prashant Kumar1, Swathi R Pullagurla1, Ashaben Patel1, Ravi S Shukla1, Christopher Bird1, Ozan S Kumru1, Ahd Hamidi2, Femke Hoeksema2, Christopher Yallop2, Julie E Bines3, Sangeeta B Joshi4, David B Volkin5.
Abstract
In this work, two different in vitro gastric digestion models were used to evaluate the stability of a live attenuated rotavirus vaccine candidate (RV3-BB) under conditions designed to mimic oral delivery in infants. First, a forced-degradation model was established at low pH to assess the buffering capacity of formulation excipients and to screen for RV3-BB stabilizers. Second, a sequential-addition model was implemented to examine RV3-BB stability under conditions more representative of oral administration to infants. RV3-BB rapidly inactivated at < pH 5.0 (37 °C, 1 h) as measured by an infectivity RT-qPCR assay. Pre-neutralization with varying volumes of infant formula (Enfamil®) or antacid (Mylanta®) conferred partial to full protection of RV3-BB. Excipients with sufficient buffering capacity to minimize acidic pH inactivation of RV3-BB were identified (e.g., succinate, acetate, adipate), however, they concomitantly destabilized RV3-BB in accelerated storage stability studies. Both effects were concentration dependent, thus excipient optimization was required to design candidate RV3-BB formulations which minimize acid-induced viral inactivation during oral delivery while not destabilizing the vaccine during long-term 2-8 °C storage. Finally, a statistical Design -of-Experiments (DOE) study examining RV3-BB stability in the in vitro sequential-addition model identified key formulation parameters likely affecting RV3-BB stability during in vivo oral delivery. Published by Elsevier Inc.Entities:
Keywords: Formulation; Live virus vaccine; Oral delivery; RV3-BB; Rotavirus; Stability
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Year: 2020 PMID: 33035539 PMCID: PMC7815322 DOI: 10.1016/j.xphs.2020.09.047
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Pharm Sci ISSN: 0022-3549 Impact factor: 3.534