METHOD AND DEVICE FOR OPTIMIZED FREEZE-DRYING OF A PHARMACEUTICAL PRODUCT
20180023893 ยท 2018-01-25
Inventors
Cpc classification
F26B5/06
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
B65D51/241
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B65D25/108
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
F26B25/16
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F26B9/066
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
B65B7/2821
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
International classification
F26B5/06
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F26B25/16
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
Abstract
A method for lyophilizing a substance is provided which may include placing at least one vial containing the substance in a lyophilization chamber, the at least one vial having an opening in which a stopper is inserted in a closed state not allowing gas exchange between the interior and exterior of the vial; providing mechanical means external to the stopper and arranged at the opening for restricting an upward movement of the stopper; lowering the temperature within the lyophilization chamber to a predefined value below the freezing temperature of the substance and reducing the pressure within the lyophilization chamber to a predefined pressure at a predefined temperature, the predefined pressure being chosen such that the force exerted by it on the stopper lifts the stopper from the closed state to an exchange state in which the stopper is only partly inserted in the opening of the vial allowing gas exchange between the interior and exterior of the vial, wherein the lowering of the temperature within the lyophilization chamber to the predefined value is performed before reducing the pressure within the lyophilization chamber to the predefined pressure and wherein lifting the stopper from the closed state abruptly lowers the pressure within the at least one vial which initiates nucleation in the substance within that vial. In addition, mechanical means is provided which may be used in order to perform the method for lyophilizing a substance.
Claims
1. A method for lyophilizing a substance comprising the steps of: placing at least one vial containing the substance in a lyophilization chamber, the at least one vial having an opening in which a stopper is inserted in a closed state in which the stopper does not allow gas exchange between the interior and exterior of the vial; providing mechanical means external to the stopper and arranged at the opening for restricting an upward movement of the stopper; lowering the temperature within the lyophilization chamber to a predefined value below the freezing temperature of the substance; and reducing the pressure within the lyophilization chamber to a predefined pressure, the predefined pressure being chosen such that the force exerted by it on the stopper lifts the stopper from the closed state to an exchange state in which the stopper is only partly inserted in the opening of the vial allowing gas exchange between the interior and exterior of the vial; wherein the lowering of the temperature within the lyophilization chamber to the predefined value is performed before reducing the pressure within the lyophilization chamber to the predefined pressure; and wherein lifting the stopper from the closed state abruptly lowers the pressure within the at least one vial which initiates nucleation in the substance within that vial.
2. The method for lyophilizing according to claim 1, wherein the mechanical means define a maximum portion of the stopper which can protrude outwardly from the opening of the vial in the exchange state.
3. The method for lyophilizing according to claim 1, wherein the external mechanical means are configured to prevent the stopper from falling off the opening of the at least one vial when the stopper is lifted from the closed state.
4. The method for lyophilizing according to any one of claim 1, wherein providing the mechanical means external to the stopper for restricting the upward movement of the stopper includes positioning of shelves within the lyophilization chamber at a predefined distance from each other.
5. The method for lyophilizing according to claim 1, wherein providing the mechanical means external to the stopper for restricting the upward movement of the stopper includes providing a closure device on a neck of the vial which encloses a space above the opening of the vial thereby being configured to restrict the upward travel of the stopper when it is lifted from the closed state into the exchange state.
6. The method for lyophilizing according to claim 5, further comprising the step of: forcing the stopper into and securing it in the closed state after the lyophilization process by pressing the closure device onto the neck of the vial.
7. The method for lyophilizing according to claim 1, wherein providing the mechanical means external to the stopper for restricting the upward movement of the stopper includes placing the at least one vial into the lyophilization chamber in a tray package having a container and a lid, the lid being held at a predefined distance from the container by dynamic elements, the lid being configured to restrict the upward travel of the stopper when it transitions from the closed state into the exchange state.
8. The method for lyophilizing according to claim 1, wherein the predefined pressure corresponds to a pressure value of 800 mbar or less.
9. A tray package for holding and storing vials, comprising: a container; a holding element positioned within the container and having at least one opening therein for holding a vial; and a lid movably supported at a predefined distance from the container.
10. The tray package of claim 9, wherein the lid is movable in a downward direction from its quiescent position in a reversible manner.
11. The tray package of claim 9, further comprising: at least one guiding element which is configured to restrict motion of the lid with respect to the container to a uniaxial motion.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
[0033]
[0034]
[0035]
[0036]
[0037]
DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION
[0038] Hereinafter, embodiments of the present invention will be described in detail with reference to the accompanying drawings.
[0039]
[0040] The method disclosed herein may be particularly advantageous in the sense that it is designed for vials which may be placed in a freeze drier in a closed state, i.e. in a state in which the stopper is preventing gas exchange between the interior and the exterior of the vials. This may be advantageous since the vials may be transported into the freeze drier in the closed state, i.e. safely preventing contamination of the interior of the vial. Once the freeze drier is closed, the vials may opened by lowering the pressure within the freeze drier.
[0041] A further embodiment of the method for lyophilizing is depicted in the flow chart 200 shown in
[0042] The method for lyophilizing a substance according to various embodiments may begin with step 202 in which the vials are filled with the substance to be lyophilized. The filling may be performed according to a standard liquid filling line using an isolator or a reduced access barrier system (RABS).
[0043] In a next step 204, each of the vials may be closed with a stopper. The closing process may directly follow the filling process such that the risk of contamination of the substance inside the vials is minimized. A vial may be closed by pushing the corresponding stopper into the neck portion of the vial such that there is no gas exchange between the interior and the exterior of the vial.
[0044] After the filling process is finished, the vials may be placed in a lyophilization chamber in step 206. In addition, as an optional step, a closure device of the kind described above may be attached to or placed on the neck portion of the closed vial. If the closure device is designed appropriately as discussed above, then placing the closure device on each vial may be seen as providing mechanical means external to the stopper and arranged at the opening of a vial for restricting an upward movement of the stopper. The closure device may be placed on the vials either immediately after filling or at any subsequent time prior to placing the vials in the lyophilization chamber. Since the vials are closed when they are extracted from the filling line, their transfer to the lyophilization chamber is less critical under the aspect of sterility. Several possibilities exist for placing the vials in the lyophilization chamber. In one embodiment, the vials may be placed in standard loading systems as known from state of the art in the form of racks, e.g. steel racks, before being placed in the freeze drier to improve their handling. In another embodiment, the vials may have already been placed in a special holding container, such as a container of a tray package according to various embodiments, before being filled with a substance to be lyophilized in the filling line. A tray package according to various embodiments may allow the vials to remain therein during the entire filling process and subsequently during the entire freeze-drying process. In addition, the tray package according to various embodiments may include a movably supported lid which may be seen to correspond to the mechanical means external to the stopper and arranged above the opening of a vial for restricting an upward movement of the stopper. The movably supported lid may be attached to the container of the tray package at a distance therefrom at any time. In yet another embodiment that may be used to restrict the movement of the stoppers when the vials are opened via vacuum in the freeze drier the vials may be placed in a rack inside the freeze drier and the distance between the shelves or shelving plates within the freeze drier may be adjusted to define a maximum travel by which the stoppers may be lifted from the vials. This option, however, is only viable if the freeze drier offers this specific functionality.
[0045] After the freeze drier has been loaded with the filled and closed vials, there are generally two different freezing patterns which may be applied in order to transform the previously liquid substance into a solid lyophilisate.
[0046] First, step 208 will be described which comprises opening of the vials by underpressure. Here, the chamber of the freeze drier is evacuated down to a pressure which exerts enough force to pull the stoppers which close the vials into their exchange states. Optionally the temperature of the freeze dryer may be lowered to a temperature above the thermodynamic freezing temperature of the substance before evacuation, for example to a temperature between approximately 5 C. and 10 C. above the thermodynamic freezing temperature of the substance. By doing so situations may be prevented in which the substance boils which would lead to a highly inhomogeneous ice structure within the frozen substance. This step may also prevent boiling of the substance during the subsequent steps.
[0047] After all stoppers have taken their exchange positions (which may take a certain time since the opening time of a vial is a stochastic process), the temperature within the freeze drier may be lowered to a freezing temperature well below the thermodynamic freezing temperature and well below the glass transition temperature, e.g. to 45 C. for aqueous solutions, in order to induce conventional freezing of the substance to be lyophilized in step 212. Since the temperature at which the supercooled solution contained in a vial spontaneously forms ice is a randomly distributed parameter, the substance in each of the vials freezes at a different temperature in the freezing step 212 and hence at a different point in time. Due to the stochastic spread of the nucleation temperatures, choosing the freezing temperature to lie well below the standard freezing temperature of the substance to be lyophilized is essential in order to eventually obtain frozen lyophilisate in each of the vials.
[0048] The random distribution of nucleation temperatures may cause the content of each vial to nucleate at a different temperature which may result in different ice crystal structure, prolonged drying time and batch inhomogeneity. However, independent of those circumstances, after the vials have been exposed to a temperature well below the standard freezing temperature of the lyophilisate for a certain time, at the end of step 208 the substances to be lyophilized in all vials are frozen and ready for the next stage in the lyophilization process.
[0049] As an alternative to step 208, step 210 may be executed after the vials with stoppers in stealing state have been placed in the lyophilization chamber in step 206. In step 210, the order of lowering the temperature and opening of the vials is reversed as compared to step 208. In step 210, before opening the vials by underpressure, the temperature within the lyophilization chamber is lowered to a temperature slightly below the standard freezing temperature of the lyophilisate, for example to 5 C. or 10 C. for aqueous solutions. As can be seen, this temperature is significantly higher that the temperature which is set in the lyophilization chamber in step 208. Due to the high purity of the solution, it remains liquid in a supercooled state in each vial, even though that temperature is chosen to lie below the standard freezing temperature of the solution. The vials may be left to rest at that temperature until they are all equilibrated at that same temperature. Next, the pressure in the lyophilization chamber is lowered to a predefined value, e.g. to 200 mbar. One of the factors defining the predefined pressure value may be the force required to move the stoppers from their closed state into the exchange state. Even though the pressure required for this to happen may be calculated, the actual pressure at which a respective stopper pops out of the vial into the exchange state is subject to stochastic variations. In other words, the time it takes for each vial to be opened is randomly distributed and, depending on the size of the batch of processed vials, may last anything from a few minutes to a few tens of minutes.
[0050] Once a vial is opened by the stopper moving to the exchange state, the pressure inside the vial drops abruptly to the predefined value prevailing in the lyophilization chamber. This sudden drop of pressure which may be assumed to be on the order of the ambient pressure minus the predefined pressure prevailing in the lyophilization chamber acts as a nucleation impulse and thus triggers nucleation in the substance to be lyophilized, i.e. the formation of nucleation seeds from fog formation in the atmosphere above the solution within the vial due to over-saturation. Still, it cannot be predicted when a respective vial is opened and consequently when the subsequent formation of ice in a respective vial takes place. The fundamental difference to step 208 is, however, that the nucleation in each of the vials takes place at the same precisely defined temperature, namely the temperature which is prevailing in the lyophilization chamber (e.g. for aqueous solutions the temperature of 5 C. or 10 C. mentioned above) and at which all of the vials have equilibrated. The advantage of this mode of operation may be seen in that the content in each vial nucleates at the same relatively high temperature i.e. slightly below the thermodynamic freezing point of the substance. In other words, independent of the point in time at which the nucleation in a respective vial may take place, the nucleation process in step 210 always takes place at the temperature prevailing in the lyophilization chamber. In that sense, the nucleation in step 210 may be seen to take place in a controllable manner. The advantages of controlled nucleation in respect to product quality, batch uniformity, process time and process cost saving are well described in the literature, for example in Controlled ice nucleation in the field of freeze-drying: Fundamentals and technology review by R. Geidobler and G. Winter in European Journal of Pharmaceutics and Biopharmaceutics 85 (2013), pages 214-222.
[0051] Independent of the actual implementation of the step in which the vials are opened by means of underpressure, i.e. either according to step 208 or step 210, in each of those steps the mechanical means external to the stopper and arranged at the openings of the vials for restricting an upward movement of the stopper may be applied or may become effective in order to prevent the stoppers from popping out too far from the vial and falling off the vial. When the mechanical means are applied, it may be guaranteed that the stopper will not fall off the neck portion of the vial.
[0052] Independently of the actual implementation of the opening process of the vials (i.e. conventional opening according to step 208 or opening with controlled nucleation according to step 210), subsequently the freezing step 212 is performed. The freezing process in step 212 is a conventional thermodynamic process in which the substance transitions from liquid phase into solid phase.
[0053] After the drying step 214 which is performed after the freezing step 212, the frozen and dried lyophilisate, i.e. the end product, is enclosed within the vial in step 216 by pushing the stopper from the exchange state into the closed state. This may be performed by lowering a shelving plate within the freeze drier towards the neck portions of the vials just enough to push the stoppers back into the necks of the vials such that they take the closed state again. It is to be noted that the lowering of a movable shelving plate within the lyophilization chamber works in combination with any of the mentioned means external to the stopper and arranged at the openings of the vials for restricting an upward movement of the stoppers. In the case of the movable shelving plate itself fulfilling the role of the external mechanical means, the shelving plate may be trivially just lowered further until the stoppers have reached their final state (closed state). In the case of the closure device being provided on the neck of each vial, the shelving plate may exert a pushing force on the closure device which in turn pushes down on the stopper. In the last case of the lid of the tray package according to various embodiments fulfilling the role of the eternal mechanical means, the shelving plate is lowered and exerts a pushing force on the lid which in turn exerts a force on the stoppers. The tray package and its use will be described in more detail below.
[0054] In the last step 218 of the method depicted in the flowchart 200, the vials can be unloaded from the freeze drier. Since the vials are hermetically closed, the risk of contaminating the end product is eliminated.
[0055] In the state of the art, a lyophilization method is known in which a lyophilization chamber is first pressurized, for example to a pressure of approximately 2 bar, and then a ventilation valve is opened to abruptly reduce the pressure in the lyophilization chamber to induce nucleation in the materials to be lyophilized. In other words, this method relies on a buildup of overpressure which is quickly released to generate a strong pressure drop which acts as nucleation trigger. However, in order to apply this method, a common lyophilization apparatus has to be fitted subsequently with the ventilation valve and an extra input which may be used to pressurize the lyophilization chamber. Both measures are time consuming and incur costs.
[0056] The method for lyophilizing a substance according to various embodiments can be applied without pressuring the chamber. As has been described with regard to step 210, the pressure drop is generated by the sudden transition of the stopper from the closed state to the exchange state. This transition takes place practically instantaneously and thus generates a steep pressure drop inside the vial, wherein the pressure drop rate is given by the difference of the pressure within the vial (e.g. approximately 1 bar) and the pressure within the lyophilization chamber (e.g. 100 mbar or e.g. 200 mbar) at the point of vial opening, divided by the time need for reaching this state. The opening of the closed vial which is practically an instantaneous process may be safely assumed to take place on a timescale of less than a second, e.g. between a few tens of milliseconds and a few hundreds of milliseconds. In other words, in the method for lyophilizing a substance as disclosed herein the nucleation process is controlled or initiated locally, i.e. by an event that affects each vial individually and independently, namely the lifting of a stopper to the exchange state in a respective vial resulting in extremely high pressure drop rates due to spontaneous opening of single each single vial. The solvent vapour saturation of the gas atmosphere above the solution of each closed vial is reliably in an equilibration state. The extremely high rate of pressure loss by promptly lifting the stopper ensures adiabatic cooling with generation of the ice fog providing instantly nucleation seeds for initiating freezing which spreads from the surface of the solution into the solution. In contrast thereto, in the method known from the state of the art, the nucleation is initiated by a global event, i.e. simultaneously for the whole batch of vials, by venting the lyophilization chamber which results in much lower pressure drop rates due to principal technical limitations and therefore to less reliable adiabatic cooling.
[0057] A further advantage may be seen in the fact that common lyophilization devices may be used to perform the method disclosed herein without any costly and time consuming upgrades or modifications. A yet further advantage may be seen in the fact that the venting of the vials takes place in a hermetically sealed and sterilized environment (i.e. the lyophilization chamber). Therefore, neither can the content of the vials be contaminated with pollutants from outside of the lyophilization chamber, nor can toxic evaporates from the vials contaminate the ambient air outside of the lyophilization chamber, e.g. the space surrounding the cleanroom area.
[0058] As mentioned above, in order to perform the method for lyophilizing a substance as described herein with a high success rate, the stoppers need to be pushed back into the closed state after the vials have been freeze dried. As already outlined above, various kinds of mechanical means external to the stopper and arranged at the opening for restricting an upward movement of the stopper may be provided to prevent the stoppers falling off the neck or neck portions of the vials.
[0059] In
[0060] The tray package 300 may further include at least one dynamic element 310 which may be configured to enable movement of the lid 308. In some embodiments of the tray package 300 according to various embodiments, the at least one dynamic element 310 may be a deformable element such as a rubber cylinder or a spring. The deformable element may be one that deforms elastically, i.e. reversibly, or plastically, i.e. irreversibly. In
[0061] A side view of a simplified tray package 300 including only two vials 405, 406 carrying a substance to be lyophilized 410 inside is shown in
[0062] In the embodiment of the tray package 300 shown in
[0063] The distance between the inner surface of the lid 308 and the container 302 or the upper rims 416 of the vials 405, 406 provided therein in the quiescent state of the lid 308 is configured such that the upper surface of the stopper 404 in the exchange state may touch the inner surface of the lid 308 as shown in the case of the right vial 406 in
[0064] The embodiment of the tray package 300 shown in
[0065] The guiding elements 412 in
[0066] In
[0067]
[0068]
[0069]
[0070] Finally, in
[0071] While preferred embodiments of the invention have been described and illustrated above, it should be understood that these are exemplary of the invention and are not to be considered as limiting. Additions, omissions, substitutions, and other modifications can be made without departing from the scope of the present invention. Accordingly, the invention is not to be considered as being limited by the foregoing description, and is only limited by the scope of the appended claims.