Biologic excipients: Importance of clinical awareness of inactive ingredients.

Due to the complexity and fragility of biological drug products, several challenges exist in their formulation development. Excipients are added to increase product stability, maintain tonicity, and facilitate drug delivery. The potential implications of these additive substances merit clinical cons...

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Main Authors: Yelena Ionova, Leslie Wilson
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2020-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0235076
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spelling doaj-7d82fc06ecf44668be4798f2c6a502ac2021-03-03T21:52:36ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032020-01-01156e023507610.1371/journal.pone.0235076Biologic excipients: Importance of clinical awareness of inactive ingredients.Yelena IonovaLeslie WilsonDue to the complexity and fragility of biological drug products, several challenges exist in their formulation development. Excipients are added to increase product stability, maintain tonicity, and facilitate drug delivery. The potential implications of these additive substances merit clinical consideration. We assessed the safety risk of excipients on the basis of their type and variability through an assessment framework, which quantifies excipient complexity in 230 biological formulations, and identifies excipient-related adverse events through published case reports. A biologic on average contained 4.45 excipients, half of that found in oral medications. The frequency distribution was heavily skewed towards the most commonly occurring excipients: water (40.4%), sodium chloride (38.3%), polysorbate 80 (28.7%), sucrose (24.4%), and mannitol (20.9%), with 44.4% of formulations not listing the concentration of the most commonly occurring inactive ingredients. A literature search revealed only 17 case reports of excipient-related adverse events, suggesting the need for more clarity for clinicians on the safety of chemical additives. These cases included injection site reactions, anaphylaxis, hyperglycemia, and acute renal failure. With the expansion of the biopharmaceutical market, it is important to consider the safety data of biologic excipients, so that therapy can be tailored appropriately for a specific patient.https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0235076
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Yelena Ionova
Leslie Wilson
spellingShingle Yelena Ionova
Leslie Wilson
Biologic excipients: Importance of clinical awareness of inactive ingredients.
PLoS ONE
author_facet Yelena Ionova
Leslie Wilson
author_sort Yelena Ionova
title Biologic excipients: Importance of clinical awareness of inactive ingredients.
title_short Biologic excipients: Importance of clinical awareness of inactive ingredients.
title_full Biologic excipients: Importance of clinical awareness of inactive ingredients.
title_fullStr Biologic excipients: Importance of clinical awareness of inactive ingredients.
title_full_unstemmed Biologic excipients: Importance of clinical awareness of inactive ingredients.
title_sort biologic excipients: importance of clinical awareness of inactive ingredients.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2020-01-01
description Due to the complexity and fragility of biological drug products, several challenges exist in their formulation development. Excipients are added to increase product stability, maintain tonicity, and facilitate drug delivery. The potential implications of these additive substances merit clinical consideration. We assessed the safety risk of excipients on the basis of their type and variability through an assessment framework, which quantifies excipient complexity in 230 biological formulations, and identifies excipient-related adverse events through published case reports. A biologic on average contained 4.45 excipients, half of that found in oral medications. The frequency distribution was heavily skewed towards the most commonly occurring excipients: water (40.4%), sodium chloride (38.3%), polysorbate 80 (28.7%), sucrose (24.4%), and mannitol (20.9%), with 44.4% of formulations not listing the concentration of the most commonly occurring inactive ingredients. A literature search revealed only 17 case reports of excipient-related adverse events, suggesting the need for more clarity for clinicians on the safety of chemical additives. These cases included injection site reactions, anaphylaxis, hyperglycemia, and acute renal failure. With the expansion of the biopharmaceutical market, it is important to consider the safety data of biologic excipients, so that therapy can be tailored appropriately for a specific patient.
url https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0235076
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