Effect of Formulation Variables on the Stability of a Live, Rotavirus (RV3-BB) Vaccine Candidate using in vitro Gastric Digestion Models to Mimic Oral Delivery

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Issue Date
2020-10-06Author
Kumar, Prashant
Pullagurla, Swathi R.
Patel, Ashaben
Shukla, Ravi S.
Bird, Christopher
Kumru, Ozan S.
Hamidi, Ahd
Hoeksema, Femke
Yallop, Christopher
Bines, Julie E.
Joshi, Sangeeta B.
Volkin, David B.
Publisher
Wiley
Type
Article
Article Version
Scholarly/refereed, publisher version
Rights
Published by Elsevier Inc. on behalf of the American Pharmacists Association. This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons CC-BY license.
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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.
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Citation
Kumar, P., Pullagurla, S. R., Patel, A., Shukla, R. S., Bird, C., Kumru, O. S., Hamidi, A., Hoeksema, F., Yallop, C., Bines, J. E., Joshi, S. B., & Volkin, D. B. (2021). Effect of Formulation Variables on the Stability of a Live, Rotavirus (RV3-BB) Vaccine Candidate using in vitro Gastric Digestion Models to Mimic Oral Delivery. Journal of pharmaceutical sciences, 110(2), 760–770. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.xphs.2020.09.047
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