4.5 Review

The Evolution of Commercial Antibody Formulations

Journal

JOURNAL OF PHARMACEUTICAL SCIENCES
Volume 112, Issue 7, Pages 1801-1810

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE INC
DOI: 10.1016/j.xphs.2023.03.026

Keywords

Antibody; Formulation; Commercial; Isoelectric point; pH; Biologic

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This article reviews the US and EU approved antibody formulations and evaluates their nature and composition over time. Significant trends have been observed, including a decrease in average formulation pH and increased use of certain excipients and buffers. The formulation space has become more homogenous and there has been a convergence in terms of pH and excipient preferences. These trends may be driven by advancements in computational and analytical technologies, increased understanding of developability attributes and formulation principles, and the adoption of low-risk development platform approaches.
It has been nearly four decades since the first therapeutic monoclonal antibodies were approved and made available for widespread human use. Herein, US and EU approved antibody formulations are reviewed, and their nature and compositions are evaluated over time. From 1986 through Jan 2023, significant formulation trends have occurred and to represent this, 165 commercial antibody therapeutic formulations were binned into 5 different periods of time. Overall, we have observed the following: 1) The average formulation pH has decreased in recent years by over 0.5 units along with a decrease in variability that is largely driven by non-high concentration liquid in vial presentations for IV administration, 2) The use of certain excipients and buf -fers such as histidine, sucrose, metal chelators, arginine and methionine has become significantly more com -mon, whereas formulations that contain phosphate, salt, no sugar or no surfactant have fallen out of favor, 3) Overall formulation space has increasingly become more homogenous and has converged in terms of formu-lation pH and excipient preferences regardless of formulation concentration, drug product presentation, and route of administration, 4) The average calculated isoelectric point (pI) has decreased 0.26 units, and 5) Over-all, the average formulation pH and calculated pI for all commercial antibodies surveyed was 6.0 and 8.4, respectively. These trends and formulation convergence may be driven by multiple factors such as advance-ments in high-throughput computational and analytical technologies, the increased emphasis and under-standing of certain developability attributes and formulation principles during lead selection and formulation development, and the adoption of low-risk development platform approaches.& COPY; 2023 American Pharmacists Association. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

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