Accelerating Vaccine Formulation Development Using Design of Experiment Stability Studies.

J Pharm Sci

Vaccine Bioprocess Research and Development, Merck Research Laboratories, Merck & Co., Inc., West Point, Pennsylvania 19486; Merck Research Laboratories, Merck & Co., Inc., Kenilworth, New Jersey 07033.

Published: October 2016

AI Article Synopsis

  • Vaccine thermal stability relies on formulation factors like pH and ionic strength, which can be predicted based on scientific knowledge and experience.
  • Support from experimental data is necessary for regulators to validate stability claims, as predictions alone are insufficient.
  • The Design of Experiment (DoE) approach enables deeper understanding of how these formulation factors affect thermal stability, even in cases where the underlying mechanisms are not fully understood; this was exemplified in a study of an aluminum adjuvant vaccine showing formulation differences within just 15 days.

Article Abstract

Vaccine drug product thermal stability often depends on formulation input factors and how they interact. Scientific understanding and professional experience typically allows vaccine formulators to accurately predict the thermal stability output based on formulation input factors such as pH, ionic strength, and excipients. Thermal stability predictions, however, are not enough for regulators. Stability claims must be supported by experimental data. The Quality by Design approach of Design of Experiment (DoE) is well suited to describe formulation outputs such as thermal stability in terms of formulation input factors. A DoE approach particularly at elevated temperatures that induce accelerated degradation can provide empirical understanding of how vaccine formulation input factors and interactions affect vaccine stability output performance. This is possible even when clear scientific understanding of particular formulation stability mechanisms are lacking. A DoE approach was used in an accelerated 37(°)C stability study of an aluminum adjuvant Neisseria meningitidis serogroup B vaccine. Formulation stability differences were identified after only 15 days into the study. We believe this study demonstrates the power of combining DoE methodology with accelerated stress stability studies to accelerate and improve vaccine formulation development programs particularly during the preformulation stage.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.xphs.2016.06.014DOI Listing

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