Assessment of innate immune response modulating impurities in glucagon for injection.

PLoS One

Amphastar Pharmaceuticals, Inc., Rancho Cucamonga, California, United States of America.

Published: November 2022

AI Article Synopsis

  • - Glucagon for Injection is a hormone medication used for treating severe low blood sugar, and a generic version was recently approved by the FDA, though it is made differently from the brand-name version.
  • - The brand-name glucagon is made using recombinant DNA, while the generic version uses peptide synthesis, potentially affecting impurities that could trigger immune responses.
  • - A study used specific cell lines to test the immune response to both glucagon versions and found that the generic glucagon had negligible immunogenicity risks, similar to the brand-name product.

Article Abstract

Glucagon for Injection is a polypeptide hormone medication used to treat patients with severe hypoglycemia or low blood sugar. Only recently, was a generic version of glucagon for injection approved by the FDA. While the generic version was deemed equivalent to its brand-name counterpart, the two glucagon products were produced using different manufacturing processes. The brand-name glucagon is produced via recombinant DNA while the generic glucagon is produced by peptide synthesis. Different manufacturing processes can result in different levels of innate immune response modulating impurities (IIRMIs). This study utilized a cell-based assay method, which allows for detection of a broad spectrum of impurities, to investigate the IIRMI risks of the generic glucagon to make sure it has similar or less immunogenicity risks than the brand-name glucagon product. Three commercial cell lines (RAW-Blue™, HEK-Blue™-hNOD1 and HEK-Blue™-hNOD2) carrying a secreted embryonic alkaline phosphatase reporter construct were used to quantify the level of innate immune responses after being treated with the glucagon drugs. The study results showed that despite differences in manufacturing process, the innate immunogenicity risk in the synthetic (generic) glucagon was at negligible level and comparable to the recombinant (brand-name) glucagon product.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9678265PMC
http://journals.plos.org/plosone/article?id=10.1371/journal.pone.0277922PLOS

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