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Physical Stability of an Amorphous Spray Dried Dispersion Graeme Horne SOS 2019 Amsterdam 14 & 15 October 2019

Physical Stability of an Amorphous Spray Dried Dispersion · Amorphous Solid Dispersions (ASD) 3 Stabilising the Unstable Time on Crystalline Drug Amorphous Drug Amorphous Dispersion

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Page 1: Physical Stability of an Amorphous Spray Dried Dispersion · Amorphous Solid Dispersions (ASD) 3 Stabilising the Unstable Time on Crystalline Drug Amorphous Drug Amorphous Dispersion

Physical Stability of an Amorphous Spray Dried Dispersion

Graeme Horne

SOS 2019 Amsterdam

14 & 15 October 2019

Page 2: Physical Stability of an Amorphous Spray Dried Dispersion · Amorphous Solid Dispersions (ASD) 3 Stabilising the Unstable Time on Crystalline Drug Amorphous Drug Amorphous Dispersion

Marketed 30%, Development 60-70%

Marketed 35%, Development 5-10%

Solubilising the Insoluble

14 & 15 October 2019

SOS 2019 Amsterdam

2

Enabling The Drug Development Process

BCS

II

BCS

IV

BCS

III

BCS

I

solubility

pe

rme

ab

ility

BCS I

BCS II

BCS III

BCS IV

Marketed 25%, Development 5-10%

Marketed 10%, Development 10-20%

cost

co

mp

lexity

• Rate and extent of oral absorption governed

by solubility, dissolution rate, permeability

• Enabling technologies can be utilised to

overcome barriers to bioavailability

• Approaches include: crystal modifications,

lipidic delivery, particle size reduction,

amorphization

• Shifting trend to develop drugs that have low solubility and/or low permeability

Pharmaceutics 2017, 9, 50

Page 3: Physical Stability of an Amorphous Spray Dried Dispersion · Amorphous Solid Dispersions (ASD) 3 Stabilising the Unstable Time on Crystalline Drug Amorphous Drug Amorphous Dispersion

Amorphous Solid Dispersions (ASD)

3

Stabilising the Unstable

Time

Dru

g C

on

ce

ntr

ati

on

Crystalline Drug

Amorphous Drug

Amorphous

Dispersion

• Most Active Pharmaceutical Ingredients (APIs) are crystalline materials possessing long-range

order and well-defined structures with stability, solubility and bioavailability (BA) related to the

crystalline form

• Amorphous materials do not have long-range order but exhibit short-range order

Crystalline

Ordered

Stable

Low solubility

Amorphous

Disordered

Unstable

High solubility

Amorphous Dispersion

Disordered, Stabilised

High & Sustained

Solubilitypolymer

API

ASDs in Drug Discovery

• Offer greater physical/chemical stability relative to

the amorphous form

• Improve dissolution and extend lumenal

supersaturation

• Enhance extent of oral absorption compared with

crystalline materials

• Can reduce the effects of pH and food on absorption

14 & 15 October 2019

SOS 2019 AmsterdamJ.Pharm.Sci. 2009, 98, 2549–2572

Page 4: Physical Stability of an Amorphous Spray Dried Dispersion · Amorphous Solid Dispersions (ASD) 3 Stabilising the Unstable Time on Crystalline Drug Amorphous Drug Amorphous Dispersion

Commercialised Amorphous Dispersions

4

A growing trend

• Growing interest in the technology: ca. 4000 scientific articles since 1974; 2000 since 2014

• Amorphous dispersions have successfully been applied at late stage and in marketed products

to increase solubilisation and oral bioavailability of BCS class II/IV compounds

Routes to commercial manufacture:

• Spray Drying, HME, Microprecipitation, Spray Coating, Solvent Impregnation

Product API Company BCS Polymer

Cesamet Nabilone Valeant 2 / 4 PVP

Incivek Telaprevir Vertex 2 / 4 HPMCAS

Intelence Etravirine Janssen 4 HPMC

Kalydeco Ivacaftor Vertex 2 / 4 HMPCAS

Kaletra Lopinavir & Ritonavir AbbVie 2 & 4 PVP VA

Norvir Ritanovir AbbVie 4 PVP VA

Prograf Tacrolimus Astellas 2 HPMC

Sporanox Itraconazole Janssen 2 HPMC

Onmel Itraconazole Stiefel 2 HPMC

Xtandi Enzalutamide Astellas 2 HPMCAS

14 & 15 October 2019

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Page 5: Physical Stability of an Amorphous Spray Dried Dispersion · Amorphous Solid Dispersions (ASD) 3 Stabilising the Unstable Time on Crystalline Drug Amorphous Drug Amorphous Dispersion

Amorphous Solid Dispersions

5

The Physical Stability Challenge

• Physical stability of ASDs is often raised as a significant obstacle to development and

commercialization

• Physical degradation often controlled by molecular mobility in the solid state and is

restricted at temperature and humidity conditions below the Tg

• Crystallization can occur throughout process, supply and shelf-life and can have an

adverse impact on product quality, performance, and safety

Crystalline

API

Crystallization

Homogenous Dispersion Crystallized Dispersion

• Predicting the physical stability of amorphous dispersions is key when assessing

developability and viability for clinical candidates

14 & 15 October 2019

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Page 6: Physical Stability of an Amorphous Spray Dried Dispersion · Amorphous Solid Dispersions (ASD) 3 Stabilising the Unstable Time on Crystalline Drug Amorphous Drug Amorphous Dispersion

Manufacturing Amorphous Spray Dried Dispersions (SDD)Assessing the Physical Stability Risk

API, Polymer

Solvent

Solution

Tank

Atomiser

Drying

Chamber

Product

CollectionSecondary

Drying

Storage /

Supply

Finished

Product

Downstream

Processing

Supersaturation

Process time

and condition

Wet SDD

(%RS)

Drying temperature

and duration

Dosage form &

process train

Packaging, duration, condition

Packaging,

condition,

In-use

• Manufacture of SDDs involves mixing the drug and polymer in a suitable solvent

• Polymer stabilises the amorphous form and can inhibit crystallization

• Process, storage, supply can all impact physical stability

14 & 15 October 2019

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Page 7: Physical Stability of an Amorphous Spray Dried Dispersion · Amorphous Solid Dispersions (ASD) 3 Stabilising the Unstable Time on Crystalline Drug Amorphous Drug Amorphous Dispersion

Case Study:Physical Stability Modelling of a Spray Dried Amorphous Solid Dispersion

Page 8: Physical Stability of an Amorphous Spray Dried Dispersion · Amorphous Solid Dispersions (ASD) 3 Stabilising the Unstable Time on Crystalline Drug Amorphous Drug Amorphous Dispersion

Clinical and Pharmaceutical Background

Indication

• Variation in GI motility and malabsorption

• Fed patients equivalent to fasted NHVs

8

Drug Profile

Property Result

BCS II

MW < 250

LogP > 4

MP < 175 °C

Solubility

(Biorelevant)Practically insoluble

Polymorphism 4 + amorphous

Tg < 30 °C

• Paediatric chronic condition

• Aqueous suspension of crystalline SMT-API progressed into Phase 1 studies (NHV & patient)

• Low MW, low Tg result in high mobility and propensity to crystallize

• Reformulation necessary to maximise exposure and enable full exploration of

therapeutic effect

14 & 15 October 2019

SOS 2019 Amsterdam

Page 9: Physical Stability of an Amorphous Spray Dried Dispersion · Amorphous Solid Dispersions (ASD) 3 Stabilising the Unstable Time on Crystalline Drug Amorphous Drug Amorphous Dispersion

Reformulation

• 25% w/w SMT-API SDD progressed into

Phase 1 studies in NHVs and patients to

assess safety and PK:

• Safe and well tolerated

• > Six-fold increase in patient plasma

levels of SMT-API relative to

suspension formulation @ 40% of

dose

• Higher exposure with the SDD

allowed for further exploration of

therapeutic effect

• SDD entered Phase 2 study in parallel

to optimising the formulation ahead of

potential commercial use

9

Maximising the Exposure Profile Through Amorphization

0

50

100

150

200

250

300

350

400

Ave

rag

e C

max

(ng

/mL

)Crystalline Amorphous

Patient Exposure

14 & 15 October 2019

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Page 10: Physical Stability of an Amorphous Spray Dried Dispersion · Amorphous Solid Dispersions (ASD) 3 Stabilising the Unstable Time on Crystalline Drug Amorphous Drug Amorphous Dispersion

Optimising the SDD

• Processing challenges to scaled manufacture necessitated refinement of the 25%

SDD formulation to one that is scalable yet meets the needs of the Target Product

Profile (TPP)

• Impact of process, polymer and drug loading on SDD stability (physical/chemical)

and performance assessed

• Output would identify the SDD with the profile aligned with the TPP

• 15% loaded HPMCAS SDD identified as preferred dispersion

• low miscibility of SMT-API in polymer & low MW, low Tg of SMT-API necessitate low

loading

• Manufacturing and processing viability

• Equivalent in vitro and in vivo profile to the clinical 25% SDD

10

Addressing Manufacturability and Stability

Can we model the physical stability of the nominated SDD to de-risk the program?

14 & 15 October 2019

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Page 11: Physical Stability of an Amorphous Spray Dried Dispersion · Amorphous Solid Dispersions (ASD) 3 Stabilising the Unstable Time on Crystalline Drug Amorphous Drug Amorphous Dispersion

Accelerated Stability Programs

• Science and risk-based prediction with many stability applications to clinical development:

• API salt / polymorphic forms, ranking prototype formulations, process development (API /

DP), packaging and excursion evaluation, retest / shelf-life prediction, etc…

• Multiple storage conditions with varying temperature and humidity (open dish typically

used)

• Conditions tailored to the drug based on physical and chemical stability

• Model ideally verified using real time data

However:

• Primary use: modelling and prediction of small molecule chemical degradation

• Limited reports on application to physical degradation (e.g. amorphous to crystalline)

Two approaches considered:

• Model rate of crystallisation as a function of Tg/T (accounts for humidity)

• Model rate of crystallisation using humidity modified Arrhenius equation (accounts for

moisture uptake with packaging)

11

General Principles and Applications

14 & 15 October 2019

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Page 12: Physical Stability of an Amorphous Spray Dried Dispersion · Amorphous Solid Dispersions (ASD) 3 Stabilising the Unstable Time on Crystalline Drug Amorphous Drug Amorphous Dispersion

Selecting the Stability Conditions

• %RH needs to be taken into consideration when selecting accelerated conditions for

amorphous products

• Moisture can depress Tg: increases molecular mobility and crystallization potential

12

Tg vs. %RH

Conditions Timepoints (hr)

40°C/75%RH 5, 24, 72, 168, 208, 504

50°C/75%RH 3,5, 20, 44, 72

60°C/29%RH 5, 24, 72, 168, 208, 504

70°C/9%RH 5, 24, 72, 168, 208, 504

70°C/0%RH 8, 24, 75, 168, 336

80°C/0%RH 1, 3, 8, 24, 75

90°C/0%RH 1, 3, 8

14 & 15 October 2019

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Page 13: Physical Stability of an Amorphous Spray Dried Dispersion · Amorphous Solid Dispersions (ASD) 3 Stabilising the Unstable Time on Crystalline Drug Amorphous Drug Amorphous Dispersion

Modelling the Physical Stability of the SDD

SDD: SDDs manufactured at 15% w/w loading of SMT-API with HPMCAS-M as the

polymer carrier. Manufacture was undertaken at development scale using a PSD-2 spray

dryer with acetone as process solvent.

Crystallinity Challenge: Dried SDDs were exposed to varying temperature and humidity

conditions with rate of crystallisation, up to a limit of 10%, determined. In addition, dried

SDD (2g) was packaged into HDPE containers with HIS and placed on a 12-month

stability study (25°C/60%RH, 30°C/65%RH, 40°C/75%RH)

Crystallinity Determination: All samples were analysed for crystallinity using DSC via

relative heat of fusion to nominal 100% crystalline SMT-API (scan rate of 10°C/min and

no modulation). For each SDD sample at each condition heat of fusion was plotted

against time and linear fits up to 10J/g API were used to calculate the initial rate of

crystallisation (J/g API.min). Rates of crystallisation were modelled as a function of T,

%RH and/or Tg using modified Arrhenius equations with predicted stability compared to

real time data.

13

Methodology

14 & 15 October 2019

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Page 14: Physical Stability of an Amorphous Spray Dried Dispersion · Amorphous Solid Dispersions (ASD) 3 Stabilising the Unstable Time on Crystalline Drug Amorphous Drug Amorphous Dispersion

Modelling the Physical Stability of the SDD - 1

Crystallinity was measured for each sample

using a fast DSC method that allowed for

the detection of Tm and corresponding heat

of fusion (representative data for

40°C/75%RH hold condition)

14

Quantifying API Crystallinity within the SDD

Temperature (°C)

He

at F

low

(W

/g)

50 100 150

y = 0.0144x - 0.0417R² = 0.9979

0

1

2

3

4

5

6

7

8

9

10

0 200 400 600

Heat of fusion was plotted versus time for

each condition and linear fits of the data up

to 10J/gAPI were plotted (representative

data for 40°C/75%RH hold condition)

14 & 15 October 2019

SOS 2019 Amsterdam

% C

rys

tall

init

y

Temperature (°C)

Signal of

interest

Page 15: Physical Stability of an Amorphous Spray Dried Dispersion · Amorphous Solid Dispersions (ASD) 3 Stabilising the Unstable Time on Crystalline Drug Amorphous Drug Amorphous Dispersion

Modelling the Physical Stability of the SDD - 2

• Assessed relationship between the rate of

crystallisation and Tg/T

• Initial crystallisation rates modelled as a

function of Tg/T assuming open conditions

• Equivalent rate of crystallisation was

observed at three different temperatures

with different %RH suggesting a strong

correlation with Tg (40°C/75%RH,

60°C/29%RH, 70°C/9%RH)

15

Results: Ln(k) versus Tg/T

Below the Tg

• Although linear fit of the data shows poor correlation (R2=0.6366) model predicts 0.09%

crystallinity at 21 days at 25°C/60%RH (0.11% observed)

• Despite poor correlation this model accounts for the impact of humidity on the Tg and

demonstrates SDD recrystallisation rate is controlled by moisture-induced plasticization

of the polymer and consequent increased amorphous SMT-API molecular mobility

14 & 15 October 2019

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Page 16: Physical Stability of an Amorphous Spray Dried Dispersion · Amorphous Solid Dispersions (ASD) 3 Stabilising the Unstable Time on Crystalline Drug Amorphous Drug Amorphous Dispersion

Modelling the Physical Stability of the SDD - 3

• ASAPprime® uses modified Arrhenius equation to predict rates of degradation

• Humidity modified Arrhenius equation accounts for moisture uptake within packaging

Lnk = −Ea/RT + lnA + B(%RH)

• Primary application of ASAPprime® is prediction chemical degradation rates

• Limited reports on the application of ASAPprime ® to model physical changes during

stability studies (e.g. amorphous to crystalline)

• In general physical properties show non-Arrhenius behaviour

• However, there is no reason this approach can’t be applied to physical instability

16

ASAPprime®

14 & 15 October 2019

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Page 17: Physical Stability of an Amorphous Spray Dried Dispersion · Amorphous Solid Dispersions (ASD) 3 Stabilising the Unstable Time on Crystalline Drug Amorphous Drug Amorphous Dispersion

Modelling the Physical Stability of the SDD - 4

17

Results: ASAPprime®

Including 0% RH Excluding 0% RH

• Initial crystallisation rates were modelled using the humidity modified Arrhenius equation

Including 0% RH Excluding 0% RH

ln(A) 61.1 ± 1.4 38.8 ± 0.2

Ea (kcal/mol) 44.5 ± 1.3 29.8 ± 2.3

B 0.078 ± 0.003 0.064 ± 0.004

R2 0.904 1.0

Lnk = −Ea/RT + lnA + B(%RH)]

14 & 15 October 2019

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Page 18: Physical Stability of an Amorphous Spray Dried Dispersion · Amorphous Solid Dispersions (ASD) 3 Stabilising the Unstable Time on Crystalline Drug Amorphous Drug Amorphous Dispersion

Modelling the Physical Stability of the SDD

18

Accuracy of the Fit

Including 0% RH Excluding 0% RH

• Accuracy of fit was determined through comparison of ASAPprime® output with real time

data at three conditions

• 25°C/60%RH, 30°C/65%RH, 40°C/75%RH

14 & 15 October 2019

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Page 19: Physical Stability of an Amorphous Spray Dried Dispersion · Amorphous Solid Dispersions (ASD) 3 Stabilising the Unstable Time on Crystalline Drug Amorphous Drug Amorphous Dispersion

Modelling the Physical Stability of the SDD

• Modelled data was used to predict shelf life (10% crystalline API) for open and/or

closed conditions and compared to real-time data

19

Shelf Life Prediction

Time to 10% crystallinity (years)

Model Conditions Used Open Packaged

ASAPprime® 7 (0% + > 0% RH) 15.3 15.9

ASAPprime® 4 (> 0% RH) 2.4 3.6

• ASAPprime® accurately models the rate of crystallisation for the SDD up to 12 months

and predicts a shelf life of 3.6 years in clinically relevant packaging

Hypotheses for why the 0% RH samples have different rates:

• Samples contain residual moisture and/or unaccounted water. May be

thermodynamically distinct from “bulk” adsorbed water

• This water may be decreasing the rate of crystallisation due to API-water interaction,

different miscibility in the polymer

14 & 15 October 2019

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Page 20: Physical Stability of an Amorphous Spray Dried Dispersion · Amorphous Solid Dispersions (ASD) 3 Stabilising the Unstable Time on Crystalline Drug Amorphous Drug Amorphous Dispersion

Physical Stability Modelling of Amorphous SDD

• Predictive physical stability modelling de-risked the late-stage development

of a chemically stable BCS class II SDD

• ASAPprime® successfully predicted rate of crystallisation over 12 months in

clinically relevant packaging

• Predictive stability modelling can be applied to understanding the physical

stability profile of chemically stable SDDs that have similar mechanisms of

recrystallisation

• Prone to initial phase separation, low miscibility, low MW, low Tg

• Application of predictive stability approaches to physical stability broadens

the opportunity to progress NCE’s with otherwise unfavourable

pharmaceutical profiles

20

Conclusions

14 & 15 October 2019

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Page 21: Physical Stability of an Amorphous Spray Dried Dispersion · Amorphous Solid Dispersions (ASD) 3 Stabilising the Unstable Time on Crystalline Drug Amorphous Drug Amorphous Dispersion

Acknowledgements

Summit Therapeutics

Preclinical

Clinical

Peter Timmins

Bend Research

Corey Bloom

Tyler Clikeman

Tim Elwell

Clinical Studies

Patients, Carers/Parents

Investigators

Sites

21

14 & 15 October 2019

SOS 2019 Amsterdam