1. Vaccine instability in the cold chain: mechanisms, analysis and formulation strategies.
- Author
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Kumru OS, Joshi SB, Smith DE, Middaugh CR, Prusik T, and Volkin DB
- Subjects
- Adjuvants, Immunologic chemistry, Animals, Antigens chemistry, Chemistry, Pharmaceutical trends, Cold Temperature, Drug Stability, Drug Storage methods, Hepatitis B Vaccines chemistry, Humans, Influenza Vaccines chemistry, Measles Vaccine chemistry, Poliovirus Vaccines chemistry, Vaccines immunology, Vaccines standards, Chemistry, Pharmaceutical methods, Vaccines chemistry
- Abstract
Instability of vaccines often emerges as a key challenge during clinical development (lab to clinic) as well as commercial distribution (factory to patient). To yield stable, efficacious vaccine dosage forms for human use, successful formulation strategies must address a combination of interrelated topics including stabilization of antigens, selection of appropriate adjuvants, and development of stability-indicating analytical methods. This review covers key concepts in understanding the causes and mechanisms of vaccine instability including (1) the complex and delicate nature of antigen structures (e.g., viruses, proteins, carbohydrates, protein-carbohydrate conjugates, etc.), (2) use of adjuvants to further enhance immune responses, (3) development of physicochemical and biological assays to assess vaccine integrity and potency, and (4) stabilization strategies to protect vaccine antigens and adjuvants (and their interactions) during storage. Despite these challenges, vaccines can usually be sufficiently stabilized for use as medicines through a combination of formulation approaches combined with maintenance of an efficient cold chain (manufacturing, distribution, storage and administration). Several illustrative case studies are described regarding mechanisms of vaccine instability along with formulation approaches for stabilization within the vaccine cold chain. These include live, attenuated (measles, polio) and inactivated (influenza, polio) viral vaccines as well as recombinant protein (hepatitis B) vaccines., (Copyright © 2014 The Authors. Published by Elsevier Ltd.. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2014
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