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Development of Protein-Specific Analytical Methodologies to Evaluate Compatibility of Recombinant Human (rh)IGF-1/rhIGFBP-3 with Intravenous Medications Co-Administered to Neonates

Authors :
Norman W. Barton
Mark D. Turner
Wanlu Qu
Dongdong Wang
Nazila Salamat-Miller
Jennifer S. Chadwick
Paul A. Salinas
Christopher McPherson
Source :
Journal of Pharmaceutical Sciences. 111:1486-1496
Publication Year :
2022
Publisher :
Elsevier BV, 2022.

Abstract

The protein complex of recombinant human insulin-like growth factor-1 and insulin‑like growth factor binding protein‑3 (rhIGF-1/rhIGFBP-3; mecasermin rinfabate), is an investigational product for the prevention of complications of prematurity. Delivery of rhIGF-1/rhIGFBP-3 is by continuous central line intravenous infusion in preterm infants until endogenous IGF-1 production begins. Protein-specific analytical methodologies were developed to evaluate the compatibility of rhIGF- 1/rhIGFBP-3 at low protein concentrations (∼2.5-10 μg/mL) expected when co-administered with other required medications in the NICU. Highly sensitive detection of the biologic potential degradants (fragments) and/or molecular modifications (oxidized species, aggregates) required the use of reversed-phase high-performance liquid chromatography and size-exclusion ultra-performance liquid chromatography coupled with mass spectrometric detection. We report on the quantification of rhIGF-1/rhIGFBP-3, its components and degradants, to a limit of quantitation of 3.1 μg/mL upon mixing with 24 commonly administered neonatal medications. Methods developed for the rhIGF-1/rhIGFBP-3 admixtures, optimized in studies with furosemide, caffeine citrate and ampicillin, demonstrated good reproducibility, linearity, and limit of detection/quantitation. Using these methods, no increase in degradation of rhIGF-1/rhIGFBP-3 components and no increase in oxidation or aggregation level was observed with caffeine citrate, while admixtures of rhIGF-1/rhIGFBP-3 with ampicillin yielded lower mass recovery of rhIGF-1/rhIGFBP-3 components, which likely resulted from adduct formation. Furosemide was found to be physically incompatible with rhIGF-1/rhIGFBP-3. Our findings support the use of these methodologies for detection of protein modifications under various clinical administration conditions, and additionally supplement physical compatibility data studies of ultra-low concentrations of rhIGF-1/rhIGFBP-3 post co-administration to preterm infants with other medications (manuscript in-preparation).

Details

ISSN :
00223549
Volume :
111
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Journal of Pharmaceutical Sciences
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....2299125232e38a41d3ab4c00ea648043