The present invention relates to radionuclide complex solutions of high concentration and of high chemical and radiochemical stability, that allows their use as commercial drug product for diagnostic and/or therapeutic purposes.
The concept of targeted drug delivery is based on cell receptors which are overexpressed in the target cell in contrast to the not-to-be-targeted cells. If a drug has a binding site to those overexpressed cell receptors it allows the delivery the drug after its systemic administration in high concentration to those target cells while leaving other cells, which are not of interested, unaffected. For example, if tumor cells are characterized by an overexpression of a specific cell receptor, a drug with binding affinity to said receptor will after intravenous infusion accumulate in high concentration in the tumor tissue while leaving the normal tissue unaffected.
This targeted drug delivery concept has also been used in radiomedicine to deliver radionuclides selectively to the target cells for diagnostic or therapeutic purposes. For this radiomedicinal application the target cell receptor binding moiety is typically linked to a chelating agent which is able to form a strong complex with the metal ions of a radionuclide. This radiopharmaceutical drug is then delivered to the target cell and the decay of the radionuclide is then releasing high energy electrons, positrons or alpha particles as well as gamma rays at the target site.
One technical problem with those radiopharmaceutical drug products is that the decay of the radionuclide occurs constantly, e.g. also during the manufacturing and during storage of the drug product, and the released high energy emissions induce the cleavage of the chemical bonds of the molecules which form part of the drug product. This is often referred to as radiolysis or radiolytic degradation. The radiolytic degradation of the receptor binding moiety of the drug may lead to a decrease in its efficacy to act as a diagnostic and/or therapeutic.
The poor stability of those radiopharmaceutical drug products and their lack of any significant shelf-life required that those drugs have so far to be manufactured as an individual patient's dose unit in the laboratories at the hospital and administered immediately to the patient who had to be present at that hospital already awaiting the radiological treatment.
To reduce radiolysis of radiopharmaceutical drug products various strategies have been explored with more or less success: The drug product may be stored at low temperatures, or produced in high dilution, or stabilizers may be added.
Adding stabilizers however may be problematic as those chemicals may have a negative impact on the complexation of the radionuclide into the chelating agent.
Producing the drug product in high dilution has the disadvantage that large volumes of infusion solutions need to be administered to patients. For the convenience of patients and for drug tolerability reasons it would be highly desirable to provide the radiopharmaceutical drug product in a high concentration. Those highly concentrated solutions however are in particular prone to radiolysis. This contradictory position between, on the one hand, avoiding radiolysis by dilution of the drug product but, on the other hand, avoiding patient discomfort during treatment by providing a concentrated drug solution, remains a technical challenge in the design of a radiopharmaceutical drug product.
The present inventors have now found a way to design and produce a highly concentrated radionuclide complex solution which is chemically and radiochemically very stable even if stored at ambient or short term elevated temperatures.
The present invention is provided in various aspects as outlined in the following:
A pharmaceutical aqueous solution comprising
Said stabilizer(s), component (b), is (are) present in a total concentration of at least 0.2 mg/mL, preferably at least 0.5 mg/mL, more preferably at least 1.0 mg/mL, even more preferably at least 2.7 mg/mL.
A pharmaceutical aqueous solution, comprising
A process for manufacturing said pharmaceutical aqueous solution as defined as defined above, comprising the process steps:
The present invention provide the following advantages:
The high concentration allows administering a high dose within a short time frame. E.g. in the case of 177Lu-DOTA-TATE, the high dose of 7.4 GBq can be provided in a small volume of 20.5 to 25.0 mL which allows the IV infusion administration to be completed within about 20 to 30 minutes.
The use of suitable stabilizer(s), according to the present invention as described, herein ensures high stability, at least 95%, 96%, 97%, 98%, 99% or 100% chemical stability with respect to the chemical purity for the cell receptor-binding molecule after 72 hours at 25° C., even if this molecule is a sensitive peptide molecule. E.g. for DOTA-TATE 100% chemical purity were found after 72 hours at 25° C. and even after 48 hours at 32° C. were found. Even under short term elevated temperature conditions (32° C. for 12 h and 25° for 60 h) such high stability was found with respect to radiochemical purity.
Further, the use of suitable stabilizer(s), according to the present invention as described, herein ensures high stability, at least 95% radiochemical stability with respect to the radiochemical purity radionuclide complex. E.g. for 177Lu-DOTA-TATE at least 95% radiochemical purity were found after 72 hours at 25° C. Even under short term elevated temperature conditions (32° C. for 12 h and 25° for 60 h) such high stability was found with respect to radiochemical purity.
While sufficient stability may be achieved already with one single stabilizer, the use of two stabilizers has been found to be of particular suitability in stabilizing sensitive radiopharmaceutical solutions. In particular, the presence of one stabilizer during complex formation and another stabilizer added after the complex formation is of advantage as it ensures that already during the complexation reaction, the cell receptor-binding molecule is protected against radiolysis and the other stabilizer enhances the protecting effect for the shelf-life period.
Further, by this sequential application of the two stabilizers it is ensured, that during complexation only a relatively small amount of stabilizer is present (which minimizes the potential interference of that stabilizer with the complexation reaction) and after complexation a large amount of a stabilizer combination is present (which strengthens the protective power of the stabilizers for the following drug product storage time period).
This sequential application of two stabilizers also reduces the overall thermal stress of those stabilizers as one of them is not present when the complexation reaction, which involves high temperatures, takes place.
Further, particularly the use of two different stabilizers is advantageous as this combination is more efficacious in reacting to the various different radicals possibly formed by the radiolysis of the cell receptor binding molecule than only one single stabilizer can do.
A shelf-life of at least 3 days is required to allow a radiopharmaceutical drug product to be manufactured from a centralized pharmaceutical production site and to commercialize it as a ready-to-use drug product.
Therefore, due to the high stability (72 h at 25° C.) the present invention allows centralized pharmaceutical production at highest quality standards (e.g. cGMP) and at industrial scale, e.g. at 74 GBq or 148 GBq batch size which provides the drug product in numerous dose units, e.g. enough dose units for the treatment of 10 to 20 patients at the same time.
Further, due to the high stability, there is sufficient time for the present invention to be shipped from a centralized pharmaceutical production site to remote clinical centers.
Even further, due to the high stability, the present invention can be provided as a ready-to-use infusion solution which can be immediately administered to the patient without a need for the clinical staff to perform any preparatory work before administration.
The present invention of particular suitability for the somatotatin receptor binding peptides, here in particular for the very sensitive somatostatin analogues octreotide and octreotate which are in particular prone to degradation reactions. Further, the present invention of particular suitability for the radionuclide Lutetium-177 with its specific radioactivity characteristics.
Herein after, the present invention is described in further detail and is exemplified.
In accordance with the present invention the following embodiments are provided:
The term “about” or “ca.” has herein the meaning that the following value may vary for ±20%, preferably ±10%, more preferably ±5%, even more preferably ±2%, even more preferably ±1%.
In the following, term as used herein are defined in their meaning.
The radionuclide metal ion is forming a non-covalent bond with the functional groups of the chelating agent, e.g. amines or carboxylic acids. The chelating agent has at least two such complexing functional groups to be able to form a chelate complex.
The chelating agent in the context of the present invention may be
DOTA: 1,4,7,10-Tetraazacyclododecane-1,4,7,10-tetraacetic acid,
DTPA: Diethylentriaminepentaacetic acid,
NTA: Nitrilotriacetic acid,
EDTA: Ethylenediaminetetraacetic acid,
DO3A: 1,4,7,10-Tetraazacyclododecane-1,4,7-triacetic acid,
NOTA: 1,4,7-Triazacyclononane-1,4,7-triacetic acid,
or mixtures thereof, preferably is DOTA.
The cell receptor binding moiety and the chelating agent may form together the following molecules:
DOTA-OC: [DOTA0
DOTA-TOC: [DOTA0
DOTA-NOC: [DOTA0
DOTA-TATE: [DOTA0
DOTA-LAN: [DOTA0
DOTA-VAP: [DOTA0
The preferred molecules for the present invention are DOTA-TOC and DOTA-TATE, more preferably the molecule is DOTA-TATE.
Hereinafter, the present invention is described in more details and specifically with reference to the examples, which however are not intended to limit the present invention.
The 177LuCl3 may be obtained from commercial sources, e.g. I.D.B. Holland BV. The DOTA0-Tyr3-Octreotate may be obtained from commercial sources, e.g. by piCHEM Forschungs-und Entwicklungs GmbH, Austria. All other components of the drug product are commercially available from various sources.
The Drug Product (177Lu-DOTA0-Tyr3-Octreotate 370 MBq/mL solution for infusion) is designed as a sterile ready-to-use solution for infusion containing 177Lu-DOTA0-Tyr3-Octreotate as Drug Substance with a volumetric activity of 370 MBq/mL at reference date and time (calibration time (tc)). Calibration time (tc) corresponds to the End of Production (EOP=t0) which is the time of measurement of the activity of the first QC vial. The shelf-life of Drug Product is defined as 72 hours after calibration time. Drug Product is a single dose vial, containing suitable amount of solution that allows delivery of 7.4 GBq of radioactivity at injection time.
Manufacturing site prepares single doses calibrated within the range of 7.4 GBq±10 (200 mCi) after the end of production. Certificates of analysis reports both the exact activity provided and the time when this activity is reached. This value is declared as “Injection time: {DD MM YYYY} {hh:mm} UTC”. Considering the variable injection time and constant decay of the radionuclide, the filling volume needed for an activity of 7.4 GBq at injection time is calculated and can range from 20.5 and 25.0 mL.
177Lu-DOTA0-Tyr3-
For a 74 GBq batch size (2 Ci batch size) a 177LuCl3 solution, 74 GBq in HCl, is mixed together with a DOTA-Tyr3-Octreotate solution, 2 mg and a Reaction Buffer solution, containing an antioxidant agent (i.e. Gentisic acid) and a buffer system (i.e. Acetate buffer system) able to allow the radiolabelling that occurs at temperature 90 to 98° C. for several minutes.
The synthesis is carried out using a single use disposable kit cassette installed on the front of the synthesis module which contains the fluid pathway (tubing), reactor vial and sealed reagent vials.
The obtained mother solution is diluted with a solution containing a chelating agent (i.e. DTPA) and an antioxidant agent (i.e. ascorbic or gentisic acid) and, then, sterile filtered through 0.2 μm to give the ready-to-use solution as described in Example 1.
Finally, the solution is dispensed in volumes of from 20.5 to 25.0 mL into sterile vials. The stoppered vials are enclosed within lead containers for protective shielding.
The following table provides the stability test data for a batch produced at 74 GBq batch size according to the process described in Example 2.
177Lu-DOTA0-Tyr3-octreotate (%)
177Lu-DOTA0-Tyr3-octreotate (%)
177Lu-DOTA0-Tyr3-octreotate (%)
177Lu-DOTA0-Tyr3-octreotate (%)
Very similar good stability results were obtained for batches produced at 148 GBq batch size.
Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | 16045484 | Jul 2018 | US |
Child | 17209121 | US |