Lyophilization, also known as freeze-drying, is a technological procedure, commonly used in the production of biopharmaceuticals for drying of formulations with thermo-labile protein substances to improve stability of the final product. The procedure consists of three phases: freezing, primary drying and secondary drying. In primary drying, frozen water is removed by sublimation, while in secondary drying, residual non-frozen water is removed by desorption. Freeze-drying of proteins demands the use of different excipients that stabilize the protein and bulking agents that ensure the elegant appearance of the lyophilized cake. One of the most commonly used bulking agents is mannitol.
Mannitol can crystallize into different polymorphs during the freeze-drying process and one of those is metastable mannitol hemihydrate (MHH). Emergence of MHH can reduce the stability of the product due to the spontaneous liberation of water bonded in its structure. Because of that, we want to avoid its presence in the final product. The aim of this thesis was to study the impact of process conditions and formulation composition on mannitol crystallization during lyophilization, especially on the emergence of MHH.
We used five different formulations that all contained protein and mixture of mannitol and sucrose and performed eight cycles that differed from each other in temperature during annealing, primary drying and secondary drying phase. The mannitol polymorphs in lyophilizates were studied using X-ray powder diffraction and thermal analysis. Additionally, we performed different analyses to determine the quality of the cake, including measuring of reconstitution time, residual water content with Karl-Fischer method, BET analysis and scanning electron microscopy.
The obtained results showed that during freeze-drying mannitol crystalized mainly as δ form and also as MHH. Quantity of MHH was highest in samples which contained lower fraction of mannitol and highest fraction of amorphous components. Protein had a complex impact on mannitol crystallization: in low concentration, it inhibited crystallization of MHH and crystallization of δ form was favored, while at high concentration of protein, an increase in MHH content was observed. Less hemihydrate emerged during annealing at -8 °C compared to standard cycle with annealing at -20 °C. Absence of the annealing step resulted in crystallization of δ polymorph. Temperature of the primary drying phase did not have significant impact on mannitol crystallization. We were also able to reduce the hemihydrate content with higher temperature during secondary drying (45 °C).
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