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In vitro performance of composition-equivalent PLGA microspheres encapsulating exenatide acetate by solvent evaporation.

Int J Pharm · 2023

Last updated 2026-05-28

Researchers tested a new method to make Bydureon®, a weekly diabetes injection, using a different manufacturing process. They found that some versions of the new microspheres released less than 5% of the drug too quickly, and one version matched Bydureon’s release pattern but started one week later. Changes in the manufacturing process affected how long the drug stayed stable and how it was released over time.

AI summary of the abstract below.

JournalInt J Pharm, 2023
Citations10
Relative citation ratio1.77
NIH percentile70
Molecules exenatide
Conditions studied Type 2 Diabetes

Abstract

The once-weekly Bydureon® (Bdn) PLGA microsphere formulation encapsulating the GLP-1 receptor agonist, exenatide acetate, is an important complex injectable product prepared by coacervation for the treatment of type 2 diabetic patients. Encapsulation by coacervation is useful to minimize an undesirable initial burst of exenatide, but it suffers from manufacturing difficulties such as process scale-up and batch-to-batch variations. Herein we prepared exenatide acetate-PLGA formulations of similar compositions using the desirable alternative double emulsion-solvent evaporation technique. After screening several process variables, we varied the PLGA concentration, the hardening temperature, and the collected particle size range, and determined the resulting drug and sucrose loading, initial burst release, in vitro retention kinetics, and peptide degradation profiles using Bdn as a positive control. All formulations exhibited a triphasic release profile with a burst, lag, and rapid release phase, although the burst release was greatly decreased to <5% for some. Marked differences were observed in the peptide degradation profiles, particularly the oxidized and acylated fractions, when the polymer concentration was varied. For one optimal formulation, the release and peptide degradation profiles were similar to Bdn microspheres, albeit with an induction time shift of one week, likely due to the slightly higher Mw of PLGA in Bdn. These results highlight the effects of key manufacturing variables on drug release and stability in composition-equivalent microspheres encapsulating exenatide acetate and indicate the potential of manufacturing the microsphere component of Bdn by solvent evaporation.

Verbatim abstract via PubMed 37423376 ↗

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