Cambridge Healthtech Institute’s 3rd Annual

Formulation and Stability

Emerging Tools and Methods for Formulating Novel Biologic Drug Products

23 - 24 March 2022 ALL TIMES CET

Cambridge Healthtech Institute’s 3rd Annual Formulation and Stability conference is an essential yearly gathering of analytical and formulation scientists from leading industry companies that provides an exchange of scientific developments and emerging technologies in an environment that encourages discussion with colleagues. For 2022, the meeting will address the formulation challenges of emerging modalities, new strategies for predictive analysis at this stage, exciting new analytical methodologies and the best practices being employed to overcome formulation and stability challenges. A special session explores learnings from the rapid development, deployment and evolution of Covid vaccines.

Wednesday, 23 March

PLENARY LOCATION: Vivaldi 1 & 2

PLENARY SESSION: FUTURE OF BIOPROCESSING

11:15

Chairperson's Remarks

Margit Holzer, PhD, Owner, Ulysse Consult
11:20

PLENARY PRESENTATION: Is Current Bioprocessing Fit for the Future?

Alois Jungbauer, PhD, Professor & Head, Biotechnology, Institute of Bioprocess Science and Engineering, University of Natural Resources and Life Sciences (BOKU)

The future of global bioprocessing demands flexible, scalable solutions that can accommodate the rapidly changing landscape of the biopharmaceutical industry while also minimizing the impact on the environment in the face of climate change. Currently, two extreme production scenarios exist – the use of fully disposable factories offering flexibility and speed; and large stainless steel plants designed for high capacity. This presentation will discuss how bioprocessing can meet the needs of both the industry and the environment for the benefit of patients, economics and supply, and whether current bioprocessing is fit for the future.

11:50

PLENARY PRESENTATION: Intensification Strategies: The Path to Continuous Processing

Stefan R. Schmidt, MBA, PhD, COO & Head, Operations, BioAtrium AG

Continuous processing is the holy grail for many industries and became popular for bioprocessing in the last decade, too. Intensification is a prerequisite to enable a step wise transformation towards that goal. This presentation gives a comprehensive overview on strategies where and how to implement process intensification and quantifies the benefits like plant occupancy time and optimizing capacity based on successful examples and case studies.

12:20 Session Break
12:30 Luncheon Presentation (Sponsorship Opportunity Available) or Enjoy Lunch on Your Own
13:00 Refreshment Break in the Exhibit Hall with Poster Viewing (Verdi)

ROOM LOCATION: Rossini 2

EMERGING TECHNOLOGIES IN FORMULATION DEVELOPMENT

13:45

Chairperson's Remarks

Shahid Uddin, PhD, Director, Drug Product, Formulation & Stability, Immunocore
13:50

Formulation Development and Stability of Adeno-Associated Virus

Matthew Petroff, PhD, High-Throughput Process Development Lead, Spark Therapeutics, Inc.

Formulation development of adeno-associated virus drug products is challenged by high molecule complexity, complicated degradation pathways, complex delivery routes, and scarce material for studies. This talk will describe some of Spark Therapeutic’s approaches to leverage automated, small-scale, and high-throughput screening techniques to address these challenges. Examples will include a case study of formulation optimization for an engineered AAV serotype.

14:20 KEYNOTE PRESENTATION:

Design of Biopharmaceutical Formulations Accelerated by Machine Learning

Paolo Arosio, PhD, Assistant Professor, Chemistry & Applied Biosciences, ETH Zurich

Not only large data sets. Machine learning methods can help reduce the data required to develop biological drug products. Here I will show a machine learning algorithm to accelerate the design of biopharmaceutical formulations. This method provides high speed of converging to optimal combinations of excipients, the ability to transfer prior knowledge and the identification of trade-offs in optimizing multiple biophysical properties.

14:50

Emerging Pharmaceutical Technologies for the Manufacturing of Novel Formulations

Dimitrios Lamprou, PhD, Reader in Pharmaceutical Engineering, Queen's University Belfast, United Kingdom

Emerging bio(pharmaceutical) technologies (e.g., additive manufacturing, electrospinning, and micro/nanofluidics) are aiming to prepare systems that can be used for personalised medicine, be adapted to patient’s needs, and teach old drugs new tricks. For example, proteins can be encapsulated into lipid or polymeric (e.g., PLGA) particles formulated by microfluidics, biologic molecules can be encapsulated in nanofibers by electrospinning for drug delivery and/or tissue engineering applications, and additive manufacturing (e.g., 3D printing & bioprinting) provides the ability on preparing biodegradable systems (e.g., drug delivery systems or medical implants).

DELIVERY CHALLENGES

15:20

Formulation Challenges for Low Concentration Botulinum Neurotoxin Formulations

Robert Kelly, MSc, Senior Scientist, Formulation & Stability, Ipsen, United Kingdom

In this presentation, Rob will discuss the key challenges associated with the design and development of novel biologics formulations for low content, highly potent, Botulinum Neurotoxin products. The presentation will span a range of subject areas including the challenges of low concentrations for analytical capabilities and the control of content in development, manufacturing, and clinical processes.

15:50 Refreshment Break in the Exhibit Hall with Poster Viewing (Verdi)
16:25

Case Studies of Delivery Challenges in Developing Antibody-Based Drugs

Michael Siedler, PhD, Section Head, NBE Formulation Sciences & Process Development, Abbvie Deutschland GmbH & Co. KG, Germany

Developability screenings in conjunction with establishing technology platforms allowed for a significant reduction in development timelines for monoclonal antibodies without increasing the development risk. However, the need for the convenient delivery of high doses of antibodies, in combination with new molecular formats and the further acceleration of development timelines leads to increasing development risk. Therefore, new tools and development concepts are presented that would enable to cope with these challenges.

16:55

Use of Creative Formulation to Overcome Delivery Challenges of Existing and Emerging Therapeutic Modalities

Jan Jezek, CSO, Arecor, United Kingdom

Rapid development of new therapeutic modalities requires delivery methods to be adapted or fully re-designed to ensure both efficacy and patient convenience. In addition, the user convenience of many existing products can be significantly improved by modifications in their formulation and delivery method. The talk, which will include several case studies, will outline the critical role of creative formulation in addressing the delivery challenges of both existing and emerging therapies.

17:25

Formulation and Delivery Challenges of Novel Biotherapeutics for Cancer

Priscilla Ranglani, PhD, Formulation Development Manager, Scancell, United Kingdom

Novel biotherapeutics and vaccines for cancer treatment can require new approaches to formulation and selection of delivery methods and devices. This presentation reviews strategies being used by Scancell to address these challenges.

17:55 Close of Day

Thursday, 24 March

08:00 Registration Open and Morning Coffee (Foyer)

ROOM LOCATION: Rossini 2

AGGREGATION & STABILITY

08:25

Chairperson's Remarks

Zahir Akhunzada, PhD, Research Scientist, Drug Product Development (DPD), Bristol Myers Squibb Co., United States
08:30

Developability Assessment of Biologics and Formulation of Novel Molecules

Shahid Uddin, PhD, Director, Drug Product, Formulation & Stability, Immunocore

Developability assessments have grown more challenging with the proliferation of novel modalities and constructs. This presentation will explore strategies for approaching developability evaluations for new programs that do not fit with platformed approaches and consider how these studies impact the formulation steps that follow.

09:00

How to Bring Sub-Visible Particle Analysis by Light Obscuration to the Next Level

Tobias Werk, PhD, CEO, Bionter AG, Switzerland

Sub-visible particle testing is mandatory for any bio-pharmaceutical preparation because particles are critical for patient safety. Until today the robust and mature light obscuration technology only provides counting and sizing information and destroys the sample during testing. Today we can transform it into a non-destructive, accurate technology that stays compliant to the regulations and soon will be able to discriminate particle types. Higher computational power, smart automation and a spark of innovation does the trick.

09:30

Optimization of Protein/Peptide Developability by Rational Design

Christian Poulsen, Director, Biophysics and Injectable Formulation, Novo Nordisk A/S, Denmark

Development of protein/peptide-based drugs includes several disciplines from initial target exploration to final submission for regulatory approval. Identification of the lead drug compound has conventionally focused on optimization of in vitro/in vivo parameters such as receptor binding/selectivity, PK/PD, toxicity, etc., whereas parameters including biophysics/stability of importance for the final drug performance have been given less attention. A case exemplifying in-parallel optimization of in vitro and biophysics/stability properties is presented.

Thomas Nsenda, PhD, Director Business Development EMEA, Pfanstiehl GmbH

Commercial Biotherapeutics Stabilized with Trehalose and Sucrose

Key Issues in Biopharma Formulation Development

Essential components of a “Platform Biopharma Formulation”

Examples for utilizations and functionalities of Sucrose and Trehalose in Covid 19 related formulations/vaccines and techniques

Understanding important physicochemical properties of Trehalose and Sucrose

Purity, Quality, Consistency in Pfanstiehl’s Trehalose and Sucrose

Advantages of Trehalose over Sucrose

10:30 Coffee Break in the Exhibit Hall with Poster Viewing (Verdi)
11:15

Challenges in Analyzing High Concentration Protein Aggregates: Characterization of SVPs with MFI/FlowCam

Zahir Akhunzada, PhD, Research Scientist, Drug Product Development (DPD), Bristol Myers Squibb Co., United States

Analysis of high concentration protein formulations poses some challenges. Molecular crowding and dipolar interactions lead to self-association with increased viscosity and changes in fluid dynamics. Sub-visible particles (SVPs) pose a major challenge in the development of high concentration protein formulations. Distinction between proteinaceous and other SVPs is vital in monitoring form stability. The current LO method has limitations to detect translucent particles. Thus, an unambiguous method to characterize SVPs is needed. This talk will discuss some of the techniques to characterize and distinguish SVPs in protein formulations by MFI/FlowCam/SLIM with the MIA and Lumetics.

11:45

Challenges and Opportunities in Preformulation Assessment for Large Biotherapeutic Modalities

Shwetha Iyer, PhD, Principal Scientist, Novartis Institutes for BioMedical Research, United States

With emerging non-mabs like Fc silencing formats, bispecific mabs, therapeutics proteins, and newer modalities such as gene therapies and AAV’s, designing stable liquid formulation is more challenging. Co-development of the clinical service formulation enables an in-depth understanding of the degradation pathways and the possibility of a stable liquid formulation. With the use of forced degradation studies and high throughput biophysical predictive tools, key developability questions can be addressed.

FORMULATION LEARNINGS FROM COVID-19 VACCINES

12:15

Design of Freeze-Dried ChAdOx Vaccine Formulations

Paul Dalby, PhD, Professor, Biochemical Engineering, University College London, United Kingdom

Adenovirus vectors offer a versatile vaccine platform. The Oxford Jenner Institute ChAdOx platform is licensed for Ebola and the Oxford-AstraZeneca COVID-19 vaccine which has been administered to >500m people. Distribution and storage at 2-8 °C is possible for months, but storage at higher temperatures would enable easier access to communities and people in regions without cold-chains. Here we present the formulation and process development for stable freeze-dried ChAdOx vaccines.

12:45 Session Break
Stefan Braun, Biomolecule Formulation Scientist, Liquid Formulation R&D, Merck KGaA

Viscosity is one major challenge in formulating highly-concentrated antibody drug products suitable for subcutaneous injection. Even during filtration steps in downstream processing, attractive interactions and resulting high viscosity in these formulations bear challenges to material and schedules.

We have developed the Viscosity Reduction Platform consisting of viscosity-modifying excipient combinations that provide a tailored approach to address these issues in both manufacturing steps.

13:25 Session Break

DIGITAL METHODS IN FORMULATION DEVELOPMENT

13:45

Chairperson's Remarks

Christoph Brandenbusch, PhD, Assistant Professor, Bioprocess Separations & Biologics Formulation Development, TU Dortmund University, Germany
13:50

Super Coarse Grained Modeling in Formulation Development – What Thermodynamic Approaches Have to Offer

Christoph Brandenbusch, PhD, Assistant Professor, Bioprocess Separations & Biologics Formulation Development, TU Dortmund University, Germany

Protein instability in liquid formulations, especially aggregation is a cause of the molecular interactions in solution. Besides several analytical techniques that allow for their characterization, these interactions can be modeled (and in some cases even predicted) using coarse-grained modeling approaches. This allows results in a first estimate on aggregation propensity induced by the respective excipients, enables a first choice synergetic excipients, and an initial formulation window for further evaluation.

14:20

Statistical Analysis of Large Biophysical Screening Data Sets in Protein Formulation

Pernille Harris, PhD, Department Head, Chemistry, University of Copenhagen, Denmark

Biologics are complex molecules and good formulation conditions are difficult to find. There is a need for public data where stress experiments are compared with characterization. In the PIPPI consortium, high-throughput characterization was performed on 16 different proteins in different buffers. As expected, good formulation conditions were highly protein depended and more data are needed to enable a valid prediction tool. Additionally, some methods showed good correlation with long-term stress studies.

14:50 Close of Summit