Abstract
Leachables in pharmaceutical products may react with biomolecule Active Pharmaceutical Ingredients (APIs) e.g., mAb, peptide, RNA, potentially compromising product safety, efficacy or impacting quality attributes. This investigation explored a series of in silico models to screen extractables and leachables to assess their possible reactivity with biomolecules. These in silico models were applied to collections of known leachables to identify functional and structural chemical classes likely to be flagged by these in silico approaches. Flagged leachable functional classes included antimicrobials, colorants, and film forming agents, while specific chemical classes, included epoxides, acrylates and quinones. In addition, a dataset of 22 leachables with experimental data indicating their interaction with insulin glargine was used to evaluate whether one or more in silico methods are fit-for-purpose as a preliminary screen for assessing this biomolecule reactivity. Analysis of the data concluded that the sensitivity of an in silico screen using multiple methodologies was 80-90% and specificity 58-92%. A workflow supporting the use of in silico methods in this field is proposed based on both the results from this assessment and best practices in the field of computational modelling and quality risk management.
- Biomolecule active pharmaceutical ingredients
- Computational methods
- Covalent interaction
- Extractables and leachables 
- Monoclonal antibodies
- Predictive methods
- Received December 15, 2022.
- Accepted December 5, 2023.
- Copyright © 2023, Parenteral Drug Association
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