4.5 Article

Protein Adsorption and Excipient Effects on Kinetic Stability of Silicone Oil Emulsions

Journal

JOURNAL OF PHARMACEUTICAL SCIENCES
Volume 99, Issue 4, Pages 1721-1733

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE INC
DOI: 10.1002/jps.21982

Keywords

protein aggregation; adsorption; silicone oil; colloidal stability; formulation; excipients

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The effect of silicone oil on the stability of therapeutic protein formulations is of concern in the biopharmaceutical industry as more proteins are stored and delivered in prefilled syringes. Prefilled syringes provide convenience for medical professionals and patients, but prolonged exposure of proteins to silicone oil within prefilled syringes may be problematic. In this study, we characterize systems of silicone oil-inaqueous buffer emulsions and model proteins in formulations containing surfactant, sodium chloride, or sucrose. For each of the formulations studied, silicone oil-induced loss of soluble protein, likely through protein adsorption onto the silicone oil droplet surface. Excipient addition affected both protein adsorption and emulsion stability. Addition of surfactant stabilized emulsions but decreased protein adsorption to silicone oil microdroplets. In contrast, addition of sodium chloride increased protein adsorption and decreased emulsion stability. Silicone oil droplets with adsorbed lysozyme rapidly agglomerated and creamed out of suspension. This decrease in the kinetic stability of the emulsion is ascribed to surface charge neutralization and a bridging flocculation phenomenon and illustrates the need to investigate not only the effects of silicone oil on protein stability, but also the effects of protein formulation variables on emulsion stability. (C) 2009 Wiley-Liss, Inc. and the American Pharmacists Association J Pharm Sci 99:1721-1733, 2010

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