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July/August 2016

Volume 19, Issue 5

 

 

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Articles in this Issue

  • The Pharmaceuticals App Market is Comparatively Weak and Inherently Limited, but Considerable...

    John Bray
    The adoption of technology for use in the pharmaceutical industry has historically been sluggish and often late to arrive when compared to other industries. This is primarily due to concerns regarding both the physical safety of patients and the protection of private patient information. While the consumer market has been quick to take advantage of social media outreach, cloud technology and mobile software applications (apps), the pharmaceuticals industry has been hesitant despite potential value.
  • Application of Electrospray Ionization Mass Spectrometry in a Quality Control Laboratory

    Markus Haberger, Lea Bonnington, Katrin Bomans, Maria Maier, Susanne Eltner, Markus Dembowski, Dietmar Reusch, Patrick Bulau
    Chemical and post-translational modifications, including crystallizable fragment (Fc) glycosylation, that occur in the marketed IgG1 antibody trastuzumab have been extensively reviewed. Glycosylation of therapeutic proteins is crucial for their biological activity. Glycosylation profiles vary depending on, for example, production cell type used, fermentation process, or even production scale. Variance in glycan patterns based on manufacturing variability was described also for marketed antibody products. This variability might be even more pronounced during development of monoclonal antibodies as a result of multiple changes implemented during process optimization.
  • Mold Monitoring and Control in Pharmaceutical Manufacturing Areas

    Tony Cundell, Ph.D.
    Recent high profile product recalls associated with mold contamination has resulted in more attention from the FDA to fungal isolation in environmental monitoring and product testing in the pharmaceutical industry. Companies need to anticipate these FDA concerns especially with respect to the upcoming regulatory inspections and institute remediation when mold is found in their products and manufacturing facilities to protect patient safety.
  • The Hottest Topics in Microbiology

    Karen Ginsbury
    No think tank or article on hot micro topics would be complete without discussing rapid methods. There are many available. For the most part, pharma companies seem to have implemented these mostly in the area of microbial identification. However, there are increasing interesting offerings in the area of real time counts of viable and total particles where the total particles include and can distinguish viable organisms.
  • Assessing and Addressing The Risks Associated With Sf-Rhabdovirus, An Adventitious Agent In...

    Donald L. Jarvis, PhD, Ajay Maghodia. phD, Christoph Geisler. phD
    Since 1983, the baculovirus-insect cell system (BICS) has been used to produce thousands of different recombinant proteins for diverse areas of biomedical research. Since 2009, the BICS has also been used to manufacture biologics for human or veterinary medicine. Four BICS products are currently approved for human use and several others are in various stages of human clinical trials. Thus, the BICS is now recognized as a bona fide biologics manufacturing platform.
  • Identification of Individual Components from the Manufacturing Chain of a Final Vaccine Product...

    Sasmit Deshmukh, Kamaljit Bhandal, Bruce Carpick, Marina Kirkitadze
    Manufacturing of vaccines is a lengthy and labor-intensive process that involves numerous steps. This entire process can take from 6 to 22 months and each step needs the appropriate controls to comply with the standards of Good Manufacturing Practices (GMP). Upon completion of these steps, the vaccine is released for human use.
  • Scaling-Down Local Mixing Effects for Biotechnology Applications

    Márcio B. Machado, Suzanne M. Kresta
    The scale-up/down of an industrial process is still a big challenge. The mixing conditions should ideally be matched between scales but this is not always feasible. The difference in vessel sizes can vary from as small as 200 mL in bench scale shake flasks to industrial scale bioreactors with more than 10 000 L.
  • The Effect of FTC Challenges to Pay-For- Delay Agreements: Brand-Name and Generic Companies...

    Teri McClerklin-Small, Gilberto E. Espinoza, Lisa Mueller
    Each year, brand-name pharmaceutical companies spend millions of dollars researching and developing new drugs. Despite the huge sums spent, only a handful of the drugs developed become candidates for further safety and efficacy investigation. Even fewer are ultimately submitted to the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) for approval. By the time the FDA approves a drug, brand-name pharmaceutical companies have spent tens of hundreds of millions of dollars (if not more) to obtain FDA approval to market the drug. To protect this investment, brand-name pharmaceutical companies obtain patents covering their drug, which the company is required to list in the electronic Orange Book.
  • Resolution of Low Endotoxin/ Lipopolysaccharide Recovery (LER/LLR)Testing

    Cheryl Platco, Jordan Kave, Edward C. Tidswell
    The Low Endotoxin (LER) and Lipopolysaccharide Recovery (LLR) phenomena have been debated as a Limulus Ameobocyte Lysate (LAL) test validity issue peculiar to therapeutic monoclonal antibodies for over three years. The FDA division reviewing Biological License Applications has requested that firms provide data which demonstrate the stability of assayable endotoxins as required in the FDA issued
  • Microbiology Roundtable

    A major trend among pharmaceutical companies today is the movement from traditional microbiology detection methods to rapid micro detection methods. Traditional microbiology methods require days to weeks to confi rm the absence of microbial contamination. With current pressure from the industry to streamline manufacturing processes, pharmaceutical manufacturers are looking to rapid micro methods to quickly release product from micro hold.
  • Minitablets: Manufacturing, Characterization Methods, and Future Opportunities

    Alfred C. F. Rumondor, David Harris, Francis Flanagan, Varsha Biyyala, Mary Ann Johnson, Dina Zhang, Sanjaykumar Patel
    A multiparticulate formulation technology can be beneficial in designing a patient-centric dosage form. One such dosage form is minitablets, which are compressed tablets with typical diameters of one to four millimeters. Minitablets can offer versatile applications, including as a pediatric dosage form, for patients with dysphagia, and uses where rapid or flexible dose adjustments are needed. Variations of the tablet formulation and coating systems can achieve specific functionalities such as orally disintegrating tablets (ODTs), extended release formulations, or gastrointestinal-targeted delivery.
  • The Benefits and Limits of Disposable Technologies In Manufacturing Protein Therapeutic

    Stefan R. Schmidt
    Over the last decade disposable equipment has become an integral part of many biologics manufacturing processes. But it should not be forgotten that this revolution started more than 20 years ago in research labs with the introduction of small scale prepacked columns and the the single-use, wave-rocking bioreactor introduced in 1999.
  • Advances in Purification Technologies Accelerate Vaccine Development

    Yan-ping Yang
    The vaccine industry is one of the fastest growing sectors in the global economy. Since the year 2000, the global vaccine market has thrived – reaching over $17B in mid-2008, and almost $24B by 2013. Sales are expected to reach $100B by 2025, an approximately 10-fold increase over 2005 ($10B), mainly driven by an increasing demand for existing vaccines plus new vaccine products.
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