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Use of manometric temperature measurements (MTM) to characterize the freeze-drying behavior of amorphous protein formulations

✍ Scribed by Johnson, Robert E. (author);Oldroyd, Megan E. (author);Ahmed, Saleem S. (author);Gieseler, Henning (author);Lewis, Lavinia M. (author)


Publisher
John Wiley and Sons Inc.
Year
2010
Tongue
English
Weight
463 KB
Volume
99
Category
Article
ISSN
0022-3549

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✦ Synopsis


The freeze-drying behavior and cake morphology of a model protein in an amorphous formulation were studied at varying protein concentrations using conservative (Γ€258C) and aggressive (ΓΎ258C) shelf temperatures at constant chamber pressure during primary drying. The two cycles were characterized by manometric temperature measurements (MTM) in a SMART TM freeze dryer that estimates the sublimation rate (dm/dt), product temperature at the freeze-drying front (T p-MTM ) and product resistance (R p ) during a run. The calculated sublimation rates (dm/dt) were 3-4 times faster in the aggressive cycle compared to the conservative cycle. For conservatively dried cakes R p increased with both dry layer thickness and protein concentration. For aggressively dried cakes (where freeze-drying occurs at the edge of microcollapse), R p also increased with protein concentration but was independent of the dry layer thickness. The sublimation rate was influenced by R p , dry layer thickness and T p- MTM in the conservative cycle, but was governed mainly by T p-MTM in the aggressive cycle, where R p is independent of the dry layer thickness. The aggressively dried cakes had a more open and porous structure compared to their conservatively dried counterparts.


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This report provides, for the first time, a summary of experiments using SMART Freeze Dryer technology during a 9 month testing period. A minimum ice sublimation area of about 300 cm(2) for the laboratory freeze dryer, with a chamber volume 107.5 L, was found consistent with data obtained during pre