Abstract

The high propensity of mannitol to crystallize in frozen solutions along with its high eutectic temperature enabling higher primary drying temperatures makes it a good bulking agent. In protein formulations, addition of a sugar (sucrose) that has the ability to remain amorphous throughout processing as well as storage is imperative to retain the protein in its native state. It is well known that in the presence of amorphous excipients and protein, mannitol can crystallize as a mixture of anhydrous polymorphs - α-, β- and δ-forms and a hemihydrate form [mannitol hemihydrate (MHH); C6H14O6·0.5H2O]. The conditions of formation of MHH due to processing and formulation variables are well established in the literature. However, MHH’s dehydration kinetics on storage and its impact on the stability of a protein has not been systematically evaluated. The overall objective was to identify conditions (temperature and humidity) at which MHH can dehydrate on storage and the consequences of the release of associated water on sucrose phase behavior and protein stability. In a mannitol-sucrose-protein lyophile, the purpose of this study was (i) to investigate the dehydration behavior of MHH (ii) to determine the influence of dehydration on sucrose crystallization and (iii) the effect of moisture released due to MHH dehydration on model protein (Bovine serum albumin, BSA or Human serum albumin, HSA) aggregation. MHH dehydration and sucrose crystallization was observed in cases where the relative humidity was ≥ 55% (open vials). A relative humidity of ≤ 33% RH prevented MHH dehydration while retaining sucrose amorphous. No protein aggregation was observed irrespective of presence of MHH or its dehydration.

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