Do co-spray dried excipients offer better lysozyme stabilisation than single excipients?

The inherent instability of proteins when isolated from their native conditions creates the necessity of suitable stabilisation techniques. Because of the instability of proteins in solution it is often necessary to produce them as solid formulations. A method of producing relatively stable, solid protein pharmaceuticals is to incorporate them with a suitable excipient into an amorphous matrix by dehydration.

The use of spray dried multiple excipient/single protein blends was compared to single excipient/protein systems using lysozyme as a model protein to establish the stabilising ability of such systems. Unprocessed controls and spray dried samples were characterised structurally by X-ray powder diffraction and Fourier transform Raman spectroscopy and also thermally by differential scanning calorimetry and thermogravimetric analysis. Retained lysozyme activity was assayed enzymatically.

To assess long-term stability, samples were subjected to conditions of elevated temperature and ... more.

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