Title of Invention

SUSTAINED RELEASE PHARMACEUTICAL COMPOSITION"

Abstract TITLE: SUSTAINED RELEASE DRUG FROMULATIONS CONTAINING A CARRIER PEPTIDE. The invention features a method of administering one or more therapeutic agents to a patient and deloivering said agent or agents continuously over an extended period of time, said method comprising: obtaining a pharmaceutical composition including a peptide carrier, one or more therapeutic agents, and upto 30 percent, by weight, of a pharmaceutically acceptable, soluble, monomeric carrier; and parenterally administering said pharmaceutical composition to a subject by injection, wherein said composition automatically forms a gel after interaction with the patient's bodily fluids and releases said peptide carrier and said agent or agents continuously within the patient over an extended period.
Full Text SUSTAINED-RELEASE DRUG FORMULATION CONTAINING A CARRIER PERTIDE
PHARMACEUTICAL COMPOSITION
FIELD OF THE INVENTION
This invention relates to the sustained-release pharmaceutical
compositions.
BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
Peptides are generally administered parenterally, e.g., by subcutaneous
injection, since they are often degraded in the gastrointestinal tract. Many
peptide treatments (e.g., insulin, LHRH, and somatostatin) require either the
continuous or repeated administration of the peptide in the patient over an
extended period of time. However, such continual injections cause both
inconvenience and discomfort to the patient.
Sustained-release formulations have been developed to deliver peptides
over prolonged periods of time without the need for repeated injections. Solid
polymeric microcapsules and matrixes, for example, utilizing biodegradable
polylactic polymers, have been developed. See e.g., Hutchinson,tJ.S. Fat. No.
4,767,628 and Kent, et aL, U.S. Pat No. 4,675,189. Hydrogels have also been
used as sustained-release formulations for peptides. These hydrogels comprise
polymers such as poly-N-isopropyl acrylamide (NIPA), cellulose ether,
hyaluronic acid, lecithin, and agarose to control the delivery. See, e.g., PCT
Applications WO 94/08623.
Some peptides have been reported to form soluble aggregates or
insoluble particulates once mixed into a solution. See, Eckhardt, et al., Pharm.
mps., 8:1360 (1991). Others have studied the possibility of utilizing these
peptide aggregates as sustained-release formulations. See European Patent
Application 0510913 A2 (1992); and Wan, et al., Pharmaceutical Research,
Vol. 11,10 Suppl., abstracts P. S291 and P. S243 (1994). However, these
aggregate sustained-release compositions require that the peptide be dissolved
in saline or biologically compatible buffers, and then incubated until a liquid
crystalline gel structure is formed.
Elsewhere it has been reported that certain soluble peptide salts can be
formulated as sustained-release gel formulations without the addition of a
biodegradable polymer or other carrier matrix to control the peptide"s release
profile. See Cherif-Cheikh, U.S. Patent 5,595,760.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
The present invention provides pharmaceutical compositions which
automatically form a sustained-release gel within a patient without the need for
any extemporaneous dissolution or incubation of the composition. The
invention is based on the discovery that certain soluble peptides or salts thereof
can themselves serve as sustained-release carriers to control not only the
peptide"s own release profile but also the release profile of one or more
therapeutic agents. The new compositions formed with such "carrier peptides"
automatically gel upon interaction with a patient"s bodily fluids and then
release both the peptide and the therapeutic agent or agents over an extended
period of time. The new compositions thus reduce the volume, cost, and
manufacturing time of known sustained-release polymer-based formulations.
In general, the invention features a method of administering a carrier
peptide and a therapeutic agent or agents to a patient and delivering the carrier
peptide and therapeutic agent or agents continuously over an extended period
of time. The method comprises obtaining a solid pharmaceutical composition
comprising a carrier peptide, i.e., a soluble, gelable peptide or salt of the
peptide, and a therapeutic agent or agents and parenterally administering the
solid composition to the patient by injection, e.g., intramuscular, subcutaneous,
intradermal, or intraperitoneal, wherein the solid composition automatically
forms a gel after interaction with the patient"s bodily fluids and releases the
carrier peptide and the therapeutic agent or agents continuously within the
patient over an extended period.
One preferred group of therapeutic agents that may be included in a
composition of the invention are dopamine agonists or antagonists, and their
pharmaceutically acceptable salts. Preferred compounds from this group
include, e.g., amantadine, bromocriptine, cabergoline, lisuride, mesulefgine,
pergolide, pramipexole, quinagolide, and ropinirole, and their pharmaceutically
acceptable salts and analogs thereof. A particularly preferred compound from
among this group is cabergoline and its pharmaceutically acceptable salts.
The compositions of the present invention advantageously allow for the
administration of soluble and non-soluble therapeutic agents to a subject, e.g.,
over an extended period of time. Further, a composition of the present
invention, e.g., as might contain a compound with poor solubility, gel or
aggregation properties, may be manufactured so as to avoid undesirable
solvents, temperatures, shear-stresses, and other undesirable conditions, i.e.,
conditions likely to destabilize molecules.
In one aspect the carrier peptide and the therapeutic agent or agents are
released over a period of at least three days, preferably at least 7 days, more
preferably at least 14 days, more preferably still at least 30 days.
In another aspect the carrier peptide itself is a therapeutic agent; i.e., is
itself biologically active. In another embodiment the carrier peptide is itself
essentially biologically inactive.
A by no means exhaustive nor limiting list of the types of peptides
suitable for use as a carrier peptide in the invention include growth hormone
(GH), growth hormone releasing peptide (GHRP), growth hormone releasing
factor (GRF), epidermal growth factor, interferon, insulin, somatostatin,
bombesin, calcitonin, calcitonin gene related peptide (CGRP), amylin,
parathyroid hormone (PTH), parathyroid hormone related peptide (PTHrp),
gastrin, gastrin releasing peptide (GRP), melanocyte stimulating hormone
(MSH), adrenocorticotrophic honnone (ACTH), luteinizing hormone (Lit),
luteinizing hormone-releasing honnone (LHRH), cytokinases, sorbine,
cholecystokinin (CCK), glucagon, glucagon-like peptide (GLP), gastrin,
enkephalin, neuromedin, endothelin, substance P, neuropeptide Y (NPY),
peptide YY (PYY), vasoactive intestinal peptide (VIP), pituitary adenylate
cyclase activating polypeptide (PACAP), bradykinin, thyrotropin releasing
hormone (TRH), beta-cell tropin (a fragment of ACTH), or biologically active
or inactive analogs of any of the foregoing.
Preferred soluble, gelable carrier peptide salts according to the invention
include salts of somatostatin and analogs such as SOMATULINE (Kinerton,
Ltd., Dublin, Ireland; see, e.g., Johnson et al., Eur. J. Endocrinol. 130:229-34,
1994), salts of calcitonin and its analogs, salts of LHRH analogs such as the
antagonist GANIRELIX, (GRX; see, e.g., Nestor et al., J. Med. Chem.,
35(21):3942-3948,1992), and salts of GH, GRF, PTH, PTHrp, and biologically
active or inactive analogs thereof.
Examples of preferred salts are those with therapeutically acceptable
organic acids (e.g., acetic, lactic, maleic, citric, malic, ascorbic, succinic,
benzoic, methanesulfonic, or toluenesulfonic, and salts with inorganic acids
such as the hydrohalic acids (e.g., hydrochloric acid), sulfuric acid, or
phosphoric acid.
The gelable carrier peptides of the invention can be compounded with a
pharmaceutically acceptable, monomeric, soluble carrier for ease of
manufacture and/or administration. Examples of carriers include polyalcohols
such as mannitol and sorbitol, sugars such as glucose and lactose, surfactants,
organic solvents, and polysaccharides. Thus in another aspect the composition
of the invention further comprises a pharmaceutically acceptable, soluble,
monomeric carrier, e.g., mannitol, sorbitol, lactose, and the like, said
monomeric carrier preferably being present in an amount of up to 30 percent by
weight of the dry weight of said composition.
Solid compositions of the invention can be manufactured in the form of
a cylinder with a diameter of less than 3 mm, and preferably less than 2 mm,
for administration by standard trocar.
A semisolid suspension can also be used in the method of the invention.
The terms "semisolid suspension" and "semisolid composition" are used
interchangeably herein to refer to viscous, paste-like suspensions of a carrier
peptide and a therapeutic agent or agents in a liquid solvent, such as sterilized
water. A semisolid suspension according to the invention includes (1) a solid,
soluble, carrier peptide, a therapeutic agent or agents, and up to 30 percent by
weight of a pharmaceuticalry acceptable, soluble carrier; and (2) a solvent, e.g.,
an aqueous solvent like sterilized water, in an amount less than 50 percent, and
preferably 20 or 10 percent, of the amount of solvent required to dissolve the
peptide salt or any therapeutic agent or agents, to provide the semisolid
consistency. The suspension may also be parenterally administered to the
patient in one injection, and automatically forms a gel after interaction with the
patient"s bodily fluids.
The invention further features a sustained-release gel formed within a
patient. The gel is made of (1) a pharmaceutical composition including a carrier
peptide or carrier peptide salt, i.e., a soluble, gelable peptide or peptide salt, a
therapeutic agent or agents, and up to 30 percent, by weight, of a
pharmaceutically acceptable, soluble carrier, and (2) one or more bodily fluids
of the patient, wherein the carrier peptide or peptide salt automatically forms
the gel after interaction with the bodily fluids, and the gel releases the carrier
peptide and the therapeutic agent or agents continuously within the patient over
an extended period of time, preferably for at least three days after formation,
more preferably for at least seven days, more preferably for at least 14 days,
more preferably still for at least 30 days. The pharmaceutical composition that
forms the gel can be a solid, or it can further include a solvent, e.g., sterilized
water, in an amount less than 50 percent of the amount of solvent required to
dissolve the carrier peptide or peptide salt or the therapeutic agent or agents,
and to provide the pharmaceutical composition with a semisolid consistency.
In addition, the invention features a solid, non-particulate, sustained-
release pharmaceutical composition for parenteral administration to a patient.
This composition-comprises (1) a soluble, gelable peptide or peptide salt (i.e., a
carrier peptide or salt thereof), and a therapeutic agent or agents and (2) up to
30 percent, by weight, of a pharmaceutically acceptable, monomeric, soluble
carrier, compounded into a solid cylindrical form, wherein the solid
composition automatically forms a gel after interaction with the patient"s bodily
fluids, and releases the peptide continuously within the patient over an
extended period time. Preferably the gel releases the carrier peptide and
therapeutic agent or agents for at least three days after formation, more
preferably at least seven days, more preferably at least 14 days, more
preferably still at least 30 days.
The invention also features a semisolid, sustained-release
pharmaceutical suspension for parenteral administration to a patient. This
suspension consists essentially of (1) a soluble, gelable peptide salt (i.e., a
carrier peptide or salt thereof), a therapeutic agent or agents, and up to 30
percent, by weight, of a pharmaceutically acceptable, soluble carrier; and (2) a
solvent in an amount less than 50 percent, and preferably 20 or 10 percent, of
the amount of solvent required to dissolve the carrier peptide or salt thereof or
the therapeutic agent or agents and to provide the semisolid consistency of the
suspension, wherein the semisolid suspension automatically forms a gel after
interaction with the patient"s bodily fluids and releases the carrier peptide and
therapeutic agent or agents continuously within the patient over an extended
period. Preferably the gel releases the carrier peptide and therapeutic agent or
agents for at least three days after formation, more preferably at least seven
days, more preferably at least 14 days, more preferably still at least 30 days.
In another aspect, the invention features a method of making a solid
pharmaceutical composition by a) mixing a soluble, gelable peptide salt (i.e., a
carrier peptide or salt thereof), a therapeutic agent or agents, and up to 30
percent, by weight, of a pharmaceutically acceptable, soluble carrier to form a
mixture; b) compounding the mixture with a liquid vehicle to form a semisolid
formulation; c) extruding the semisolid formulation to form an elongated
filament; d) cutting the elongated filament into semisolid cylindrical rods; and
e) drying the semisolid rods to form solid cylindrical rods. Preferably, the solid
rods have a diameter of less than 2 or 3 mm.
The term "peptide" means a natural or synthetic molecule comprising
two or more amino acids linked by the carboxyl group of one amino acid and
the amino group of another. Thus, the term includes both polypeptides and
proteins. A "soluble" peptide or peptide salt is one having a solubility of 0.1
mg/ml, and preferably 1.0 mg/ml, in water at a pH of 7.0 and a temperature of
25 degrees C.
As used herein, the term "carrier peptide" refers to a gelable peptide or
gelable peptide salt, i.e., a peptide or peptide salt which will form a gel upon
contact with bodily fluids. The carrier peptide is preferably soluble in water, as
herein defined. Whether a peptide or peptide salt is gelable and will have the
desired biological properties can be determined by testing the peptide or
peptide salt in one or more of the in vitro and/or in vivo assays described
below.
The term "analog" is used herein to cover any naturally occurring,
recombinant, or synthetically synthesized peptide or non-peptide compound, or
derivatives or fragments thereof, which compound may be biologically active
or biologically inactive. By way of example in respect of, e.g., a naturally
occurring peptide, the term would include, without limitation, peptides in
which one or more of the N- or C- terminal group or side chain has been
structurally modified, and/or in which one or more non-peptide or
pseudopeptide bond has been included, and/or in which one or more amide
nitrogen has had a substituent attached thereto.
The term "biologically active analog" is used herein to cover any analog
that exhibits an agonist or antagonist effect relative to the corresponding
unmodified or naturally occurring peptide or non-peptide compound.
Unless defined otherwise, all technical and scientific terms used herein
have the same meaning as commonly understood by one of ordinary skill in the
art to which this invention belongs. Although methods and materials similar or
equivalent to those described herein can be used in the practice or testing of the
present invention, the preferred methods and materials are described below. All
publications, patent applications, patents, and other references mentioned
herein are incorporated by reference, each in its entirety. In addition, the
materials, methods, and examples are illustrative only and not intended to be
limiting.
Other features and advantages of the invention will be apparent from the
detailed description, and from the claims.
DETAILED DESCRIPTION
The invention relates to pharmaceutical compositions, e.g., solid
cylinders or semisolid suspensions, that automatically form sustained-release
gels once administered to a patient. As is well known in the art, syringe and
syringe-like devices may be used to administer semisolid suspensions while
trocars and trocar-like devices may be used to administer solid compositions.
Each unit of the new compositions will contain at least me daily dose of
the desired therapeutic agent or agents multiplied by the desired number of
days of activity. After the composition automatically gels upon contact with
bodily fluids, the carrier peptide and the therapeutic agent or agents are
delivered from the gel according to a blood level profiles that are comparable
to the blood level profiles of the carrier peptide and the therapeutic agent or
agents when administered by continuous daily injection, by known sustained-
release compositions, e.g., polymeric peptide formulations, or by an infusion
pump operating under a steady mode of delivery.
Peptides Suitable for Pharmaceutical Compositions
Peptides or the salt forms thereof that can be used as carrier peptides in
the compositions of the invention form a gel in bodily fluids, e.g., lymph or
blood serum, when administered to a patient, and, once gelled, are capable of
controlling the delivery of the carrier peptide and of a therapeutic agent or
agents at a rate suitable for a therapeutic use of the carrier peptide and/or of the
therapeutic agent or agents. For instance, gels using, e.g., somatostatin analogs
such as SOMATULINE as the carrier peptide and DECAPEPTYL as the
therapeutic agent are able to maintain a sustained release of therapeutic levels
of SOMATULINE and DECAPEPTYL in the blood for one month or longer.
See Example 1, below. i
Peptides that are preferred for use as the carrier peptide in the new
compositions include somatostatin, calcitonin, parathyroid hormone (PTH),
parathyroid hormone related protein (PTHrP), soluble agonists or antagonists
of LHRH, GRF, and other soluble analogs that have the agonist or antagonist
effect of any of these peptides. Preferably, the carrier peptide comprises at least
one hydrophobic residue, e.g., non-naturally occurring residues such as
napthylalanine (Nal), norleucine (Nle), and halogen substituted phenylalanines,
and naturally occurring residues such as Trp, He, Phe, Val, Leu, Met, Ala, Gly,
or Cys, that allow the carrier peptide to better form a gel. Hydrophobicities of
amino acids can be determined as discussed in Eisenberg, Ann. Rev. Biochem.,
53:595-623 (1984).
The configuration of a carrier peptide of the composition is also
preferably altered, e.g., by a D-amino acid to decrease enzymatic degradation,
by a disulfide bridge to create a cyclic peptide, or by an internal amide bond
between the side chains of two amino acid residues. These features of suitable

carrier peptides are believed to allow or enhance the ability of the carrier
peptide or peptide salt to automatically form a gel once administered to a
patient.
The following publications disclose sequences of PTH peptides and
analogs: John P. Bilezikian (ed.), The Parathyroids Basic and Clinical
Concepts, pages 239-258 (Raven Press, N.H. 1994); Nissenson et al.,
"Structure & Function of the Receptor for Parathyroid Hormone and
Parathyroid Hormone-Releasing Hormone," Receptor, 3:193-202 (1993);
Bachem California 1993-1994 Catalog (Torrance, Calif.); and SIGMA.RTM.,
Peptides and Ammo Acids 1994 Catalog (St. Louis, Mo.).
The following publications disclose sequences of PTHrP peptides and
analogs: Yasuda, et al., J. Biol. Chem., 264:7720-7725 (1989); and Burtis, W.
J., Clin. Chem., 38(11):2171-2183 (1992). More examples can be found in the
following publications: PCT Application 94/01460 (1994); PCT Application
94/02510 (1994); PCT Application 93/20203 (1993); PCT Application
92/11286 (1992); PCT Application 93/06846 (1993); PCT Application
92/10515 (1992); PCT Application 92/00753 (1992); EP Application 477885
A2 (1992); EP Application 561412 Al (1993); EP Application 451867 Al
(1991); German Application 4203040 Al (1993); U.S. Pat. No. 4,771,124
(1988); U.S. Pat. No. 4,656,250 (1987); U.S. Pat. No. 5,229,489 (1993); and
Bachem California 1993-94 Catalog, 30-34 (1993).
The following publications disclose sequences of somatostatin analogs:
PCT Application WO 91/09056 (1991); EP Application 0 505 680 Al (1992);
EP Application 0 363 589 A2 (1990); EP Application 0 203 031 A2 (1986);
U.S. Pat. No. 4,904,642 (1990); U.S. Pat. No. 4,871,717 (1989); U.S. Pat. No.
4,853,371 (1989); U.S. Pat. No. 4,725,577 (1988); U.S. Pat. No. 4,684,620
(1987); U.S. Pat. No. 4,650,787 (1987); U.S. Pat. No. 4,603,120 (1986); U.S.
Pat. No. 4,585,755 (1986); U.S. Pat, No. 4,522,813 (1985); U.S. Pat. No.
4,486,415 (1984); U.S. Pat. No. 4,485,101 (1984); U.S. Pat. No. 4,435,385
(1984); U.S. Pat. No. 4,395,403 (1983); U.S. Pat. No. 4,369,179 (1983); U.S.
Pat. No. 4,360,516 (1982); U.S. Pat. No. 4,358,439 (1982); U.S. Pat. No.
4,328,214 (1982); U.S. Pat. No. 4,316,890 (1982); U.S. Pat. No. 4,310,518
(1982); U.S. Pat. No. 4,291,022 (1981); U.S. Pat. No. 4,238,481 (1980); U.S.
Pat. No. 4,235,886 (1980); U.S. Pat. No. 4,224,190 (1980); U.S. Pat. No.
4,211,693 (1980); U.S. Pat. No. 4,190,648 (1980); U.S. Pat. No. 4,146,612
(1979); U.S. Pat. No. 4,133,782 (1979); Van Binst et al., Peptide Res., 5:8
(1992); Prevost et al., Cancer Res., 52:893 (1992); and Bachem California
1993-1994 Catalog 94-95 (1993).
The following publications disclose sequences of GRF analogs: PCT
Application WO 91/18998 (1991); PCT Application WO 92/18537 (1992);
PCT Application WO 92/00095 (1992); PCT Application WO 91/03053
(1991); EP Application 314866 A2 (1989); EP Application 136475 Bl (1991);
EP Application 320785 A2 (1989); U.S. Pat. No. 4,732,972 (1988); U.S. Pat.
No. 4,627,312 (1986); EP Patent Application 511003 Al (1992); and Bachem
California 1993-1994 Catalog 64-65 (1993).
The following publications disclose sequences of LHRH analogs: U.S.
Pat. No. 4,307,083; U.S. Pat. No. 4,292,313; U.S. Pat. No. 4,124,577; U.S. Pat.
No. 4,111,923; U.S. Pat. No. 4,101,538; U.S. Pat. No. 4,101,537; U.S. Pat. No.
4,093,611; U.S. Pat. No. 4,087,419; U.S. Pat. No. 4,087,418; U.S. Pat. No.
4,087,417; U.S. Pat. No. 4,083,967; U.S. Pat. No. 4,062,835; U.S. Pat. No.
4,031,072; U.S. Pat. No. 4,031,070; U.S. Pat. No. 4,031,069; U.S. Pat. No.
3,824,227; U.S. Pat. No. 3,824,065; Rivier et al., J. Med. Chem., 29:1846
(1986); Ljungquist et al., Proc. Nail. Acad. Sci., USA, 85:8256 (1988); Coy et
al., Amer. Clin. Res., 10:139 (1978); Sundaram et al., Life Sci., 28:83 (1981);
Rivier et al., Life Sci., 23:869 (1978); Humphrey et al., J. Med. Chem., 21:120
(1978); and Bachem California 1993-1994 Catalog 67-68 (1993).
The following publications disclose sequences of calcitonin analogs: EP
Application 464549 Al (1992) and Bachem California 1993-1994 Catalog 28
(1993).
In vitro Assays for Suitable Peptide Salts
A simple in vitro assay can be used to determine the suitability of a
given peptide or peptide salt for use as a carrier peptide in a composition of the
present invention. The peptide or peptide salt, e.g., in the form of a powder or a
suspension, is mixed with a clear bodily fluid, e.g., lymph, plasma, or serum, in
a container. This container is heated to 37 degrees C, e.g., by a water or oil
bath. A visual inspection is made to determine whether the peptide salt forms a
gel.
An in vitro light diffraction assay can also be used to determine whether
a peptide or peptide salt will be suitable for use in the present invention. The
peptide or peptide salt, e.g., in the form of a powder, is mixed on a glass
microscope slide with between 20 and 50 percent, by weight, of water. After
being well mixed, e.g., after about 5 minutes, the slide is analyzed on an
inverted microscope, such as the ZEISS AXIOVERT 100, using polarized
light. If the polarized light is diffracted, as indicated by the presence of bright
colors, the peptide salt has formed a gel, and is suitable for use in the present
invention.
Another in vitro assay can be used to study the release characteristics of
the solid and semisolid compositions of the invention. The MLCROETTE
transdermal diffusion cell (Hanson Research, Palo Alto, Calif.) is utilized in the
assay as an autosampling system composed of, e.g., six thermostatic cells, a
mechanical stirring device, and a sample collector.
When used to study the delivery profile of, e.g., solid SOMATULINE
cylinders, the assay conditions for the autosampling system would be as
follows: release medium=NaCl 0.9%, initial volume=7 ml, rod weight=1.6 to
1.8 mg., temperature=37 C, stirring rate=60 rpm, final stirring rate=400 rpm
(for the last 15 min.), and replacement volume=481 mul. Samples can be taken
at, e.g., 4,10,20,40; 65,90,180 and 270 minutes.
The samples collected in the autosampler can be analyzed by high
pressure liquid chromatography (HPLC) and quantified in a Hewlett Packard
Series 1090 Liquid Chromatograph (Teknokroma, Barcelona, Spain) with
automatic injector. A UV-VIS Diode Array detector may be used for the
analysis. A NUCLEOSIL C-18 column, 25 cm x 4.0 mm diameter, was used.
Typical assay conditions for the HPLC are as follows: Component A=0.1%
TFA in AcCN:Water (80:20); Component B=0.1% TFA in water, flow=0.9
ml/min.; injection volume=20 microliters; temperature=room temperature;
detection=UV-280 nm; and acquisition time=20 minutes. The retention time of
SOMATULINE was calculated to be 14 minutes. The gradient system used for
the HPLC are depicted in Table I.
In vivo Assay of Sustained Peptide Release
Once a particular peptide or peptide salt is found to gel in an in vitro
assay, e.g., an assay as described above, an in vivo assay can be used to
determine the suitability of that peptide salt for use as a sustained-release
carrier peptide of a therapeutic agent or agents in animals or humans. A blood
level release profile for the carrier peptide and/or the therapeutic agent or
agents can be determined by injecting the composition into an animal, e.g., a
Sprague Dawley rat, a dog, etc., and testing blood samples taken at specific
time intervals, e.g., hourly intervals over 1 to 5 days, or 12 or 24 hour intervals
over 5 to 45 days, for the concentration of the peptide and/or therapeutic agent
or agents. The suitability of a particular peptide gel, or a peptide/carrier gel, for
therapeutic delivery of the carrier peptide and/or therapeutic agent or agents
can thus be determined.
Generally, in such an assay animals are anaesthetized with pentobarbital
(60 mg/kg i.p. for rats), and a jugular vein is cannulated for blood sampling. A
test semisolid suspension or solid composition (or standard solution for
comparison purposes), e.g., a SOMATULINE/DECAPEPTYL mixture, is
injected subcutaneously at a specific dosage, e.g., 1.0,3.0, or 6.0 mg/kg of
SOMATULINE. After administration of the composition or solution,
heparinized blood samples are obtained through the cannula at set time
intervals, and plasma is separated after centrifugation. The amount of carrier
peptide and/or therapeutic agent(s) in the plasma samples is/are determined by,
e.g., a standard radioimmunoassay (RIA) technique that allows a direct
measurement of the carrier peptide and/or therapeutic agent(s) without
extraction from the rat plasma. The resulting data are plotted (e.g., blood
concentration (ng/ml) vs. time) to establish a blood level release profile.
In addition, the presence of the carrier peptide and/or therapeutic
agent(s) in the animal can be determined indirectly by assaying for any
biological response of the animal. For example, if the carrier peptide or a
therapeutic agent is a somatostatin analog, its effect, and thus presence, can be
determined by assaying the inhibition of growth hormone release in response to
GRF using standard assays. Such indirect methods of determining the presence
of a biologically active carrier peptide or of a therapeutic agent can also be
used in human patients.
When monitored for 1 to 3 days, this in vivo assay can be used to
determine whether a particular carrier peptide will form a gel once
administered in vivo that provides the desired sustained-release of the carrier
peptide and/or one or more therapeutic agents. A carrier peptide is suitable for
the present invention if it provides for sustained-release of the carrier peptide or
a therapeutic agent over a desired period of time. Preferably the carrier peptide
or a therapeutic agent is released at therapeutic levels for at least 3 days, more
preferably for at least 7 days, more preferably at for least 14 days, more
preferably still for at least 30 days.
This assay can also be used to determine the effectiveness of a particular
peptide carrier or combination of peptide carrier and other carrier, and the
necessary dosages, for use in a specific therapy for a particular animal, by
comparing the blood level release profile to known dosage requirements for
treatment of a particular disease using a particular therapeutic agent. Likewise,
mis assay can be used to estimate the expected effectiveness of a particular
type and dosage of therapeutic agent for use in specific human therapies.
Carriers Suitable for Pharmaceutical Compositions
Although certain carrier peptides, e.g., salts of SOMATULINE, can be
formulated into a solid composition without the need for any other carrier, the
compositions of the invention also can be manufactured using carriers that are
homogeneously compounded wife the carrier peptide and therapeutic agent(s).
The carrier should be water-soluble, monomeric, and directly eliminated by the
body. Preferably, the carrier has a molecular weight of less than 1000 daltons.
The carrier is chosen to give the composition its physical characteristics, but
does not typically affect the sustained-release characteristics of the
compositions. However, certain carriers can be used to decrease or increase
both the release rate and the duration of delivery of the compositions. A nonexclusive
list of such suitable carriers would include, without limitation,
surfactants, e.g., TWEEN 80, polyalcohols, e.g., mannitol and sorbitol,
monosaccharides, e.g., lactose and glucose, organic solvents, and
polysaccharides.
Method of Preparing Solid Pharmaceutical Compositions
The manufacturing process of the invention avoids solubility problems
of many peptides since there is no need to dissolve the peptide prior to
f 9
injection. Another advantage of the solid compositions of the invention is their
stability. The anhydrous, solid compositions of the invention avoid the
problems of degradation, crystallization, aggregation, and coagulation
associated with hydrated sustained-release formulations such as hydrogels.
One method for preparing a composition of the invention using a carrier
s
in addition to the carrier peptide and loading the resulting drug composition for
injection via a trocar needle is as follows.
The carrier, e.g., mannitol, is dissolved in a liquid manufacturing
vehicle, e.g., water or an organic solvent. The resulting solution is mixed with
the desired peptide carrier and therapeutic agent or agents to form a
homogeneous semisolid mixture. If the final solid composition does not include
a carrier, then the peptide carrier and therapeutic agent or agents are mixed
solely with water or another liquid vehicle to form a semisolid mixture.
The semisolid mixture is then transferred to an extrusion chamber, e.g.,
a stainless syringe or a feeding extrusion area, with an plunger or a screw, and
an extrusion nozzle with a 0.5 to 3.0 mm internal diameter. The mixture is
extruded, cut into rods of a precise length, and collected. The resulting rods are
thoroughly dried in a vacuum and preferably have a final diameter of 2 or 3
mm. Various known techniques can be used to move the non-solid mass of
material through the orifice to produce the elongated rods with a desired cross-
section once dried.
The manufacturing vehicle can be removed by evaporation, freeze-
drying, or vacuum drying. The rods are then tested to determine the precise
mass percentage of carrier peptide and therapeutic agent(s), i.e., dosage per unit
length of cylinder. Five cylinders are taken from a batch, weighed, and then
processed to remove the total amount of carrier peptide and therapeutic
agent(s), e.g., by solubilization in an appropriate solvent such as 0.1% acetic
acid in water. The amounts of extracted carrier peptide and therapeutic agent(s)
are measured, e.g., using standard HPLC methodology as used in the in vitro
assay described above.
Prior to use, the rods are also tested for uniformity by calculating their
weight/length ratio. The lengths and weights of five cylinders are measured and
the ratio of length to weight is calculated. Criteria are established regarding
acceptable deviations from uniformity, e.g., the control is considered positive if
the relative standard deviation (RSD) is less than 5%. This RSD equals
[SDiengn/weight ratio /Meanlength/weight ratio] x 100, so it is a measure of the uniformity
of the length/weight ratio.
Once the rods have been accepted, the dosage is determined by length
and weight measurement. Having already calculated the peptide concentration,
the rods are cut into precise lengths corresponding to desired dosage units. The
rods are tested once more prior to administration by weighing them on a
balance. The rods are then ready to be loaded into hollow needles, e.g., of a
trocar.
Trocar needles are loaded through the back end after the tip of the
needle is sealed, e.g., with a cap. The back end of the needle preferably has a
funnel shape, which makes it easy to insert the solid rods. A metallic plunger
then pushes the rod out of the tip of the needle and into a patient.
In a preferred embodiment, the back end of the trocar needle is attached
to a sterile stainless steel, plastic, or glass cylinder into which a semisolid
composition is extruded, cut, and dried. The cylinder is situated such that when
dried, the rod falls into the needle by gravity. The pre-loaded trocar needle is
then ready to be connected with its metallic plunger system and its activating
system to a standard trocar.
Method of Preparing Semisolid Suspensions and Freeze-Dried
Compositions
Semisolid suspensions can be made using the same peptides and carriers
used to make the solid compositions. However, compared to the solid
compositions, the semisolid peptide suspensions are hydrated with between 10
and 90%, by weight, of an aqueous solvent (e.g., sterilized water) to form
highly viscous or paste-like compositions. Preferably the water is added just
prior to administration of the composition to a patient.
The semisolid suspensions can be manufactured by the same process as
described above for solid compositions, i.e., by extrusion, but without the final
vehicle removal step. The semisolid extruded rods can be directly injected into
a patient with a syringe-like device, e.g., as described below. Alternatively, the
dried, solid rods can be rehydrated to form a semisolid suspension prior to
injection.
Semisolid compositions can also be manufactured by a freeze-drying
process which simplifies the unit dosage control and allows simple sterilization
before the composition is loaded into a needle. In this process, the carrier
peptide and therapeutic agent, with or without an additional carrier, is first
dissolved in water. The resulting solution is sterilized by passage through a
0.22 micron filter under pressure, e.g., using a syringe with a plunger. Once
filtered, the solution must be handled under sterile conditions. Volume is
precisely controlled, e.g., with a micropipette, and the sterile solution is filled
into a sealed syringe cylinder. The liquid in the cylinder is then freeze-dried.
The resulting lyophilized solid volume is compacted, e.g., using a plunger, in
the syringe under vacuum.
The syringe containing the compacted, sterile solid is then packaged
under vacuum. The solid composition will remain stable in mis condition for
extended periods of time without need of refrigeration or other special storage
conditions. The solid composition is hydrated with water just prior to
administration, e.g., using the two-part device described in U.S. 5,595,760,
which contains the requisite volume of sterile water in a separate syringe-like
cylinder. The freeze-dried solid is rehydrated to form a viscous, semisolid
suspension that can then be injected into a patient.
A solution of the composition of the invention is undesirable, because
such a solution, once injected, will disperse and not form the sustained-release
gel of the invention. Thus, the amount of water is carefully selected to be less
than that required to dissolve a specific amount of any active component of the
composition. For example, at 25 degrees C, pH 7.0,1.0 ml or less of water is
required when mixed with 26 mg of the acetate salt of SOMATULINE to avoid
the formation of a solution. By using an amount of water that is less than 50
percent, and preferably less than 20 or 10 percent, of the amount of water
required to dissolve the carrier peptide or any therapeutic agent, a semisolid or
paste-like suspension, rather than a solution, is ensured.
In a preferred embodiment, a needle is attached to the syringe cylinder
with a funnel shaped connector. The funnel shaped connector can be part of the
needle or part of the syringe. The needle can be fixed on the syringe or attached
to the syringe just prior to use. The needle is adapted, in length and outer
diameter, to the injection route, e.g., intramuscularly, intradennally or
subcutaneously. The inside surface of the needle is preferably smooth to aid the
injection of the semisolid composition.
The syringe preferably has a plunger of small diameter (1 to 5 mm) so
that the small volume of semisolid composition (10 microliters to 300
microliters) will represent a significant length in the syringe barrel. This allows
more accurate visualization and dosage measurement.
COMPOSITION EXAMPLES
Compositions of the present invention may be prepared using techniques
well-known in the art of pharmaceutical formulation. In general compositions
of the invention are prepared by mixing a carrier peptide with one or more
therapeutic agents and, if desired, one or more pharmaceutically acceptable,
monomeric, soluble carriers, adding an appropriate solvent thereto, and then
mixing until a uniform consistency is achieved.
One convenient method to prepare a composition of the invention involves the
steps of mixing
(1) weighing of the product (Xg A + Yg B);
(2) Putting both dry powder into a reservoir preferentially a stainless steal
syringe and making a physical mixture, e.g., using a TURBULA® shaker
mixer;
(3) reducing the volume to the one of the future semisolid mixture (i.e. moving
the plunger to a position where the dead volume will correspond then to the
water contain of the semisolid);
(4) putting the powder mixture under vacuum with a vacuum pump (tube-
connection through a filter);
(5) connecting with a valve this mixture to a liquid reservoir (other stainless
steal syringe) with water or aqueous medium; and
(6) connecting both reservoirs and performing the mixture by push-pull on
syringes plungers rods. When the mixture is ready, it can be loaded into
syringes the way we make it with the one component semisolid.
Example 1 SOMATULINE/DECAPEPTYL Composition
87.5 mg of DECAPEPTYL-acetate was dissolved in 2.6 ml water and
placed in a first 5 ml syringe. 1.0 g of SOMATULINE was placed in a second 5
ml syringe and the second syringe placed under vacuum. The two syringes
were connected via a valve and Millipore filter, the valve was opened, and the
DECAPEPTYL solution allowed to flow into the evacuated SOMATULINE
syringe. 10 transfers of the resultant solution was made between the two
syringes via alternate depression of their respective plungers producing a
homogeneous, semi-solid mixture.
Example 2 SOMATULINE/CABERGOLINE Composition
1.0 g. SOMATULINE and 0.1 g CABERGOLINE are added to a 5.0 ml
syringe. The two powders are dry-mixed wit a spatula and put under vacuum,
e.g., using a vacuum pump. The mixed powder is connected via a valve to
another 5 ml syringe containing 2.6 ml water. The valve is opened and the
water is mixed with powder through the valve. 10 transfers of the resultant
solution are made between the two syringes via alternate depression of their
respective plungers to produce a homogeneous, semi-solid mixture. The
semisolid is then loaded into 0.3 ml insulin syringes at doses of 0.225 ml.
IN VIVO EXAMPLE
0.15 ml of the foregoing semisolid mixture from Example 1 was loaded
into a 0.3 ml insulin syringe and was injected into beagle dogs. Blood samples
were collected and standard radioimmunoassay (RIA) analysis was performed
thereon. The results are depicted in Table 1, below.
As will be readily appreciated, the peak concentration and duration of
release may be easily modulated by varying the relative amounts of peptide
carrier and therapeutic agent, as well as the total amount of composition given.
A similar study may be performed, e.g., for the composition of Example
2. Alternatively, the pharmacokinetic profile of the therapeutic agent may be
approximated by assaying only the pharmacokinetic profile of SOMATULINE
of the composition, the Cabergoline release expected to be proportional thereto.
OTHER EMBODIMENTS
It is to be understood that while the invention has been described in
conjunction with the detailed description thereof, that the foregoing description
is intended to illustrate and not limit the scope of the invention in any way.
Other aspects, advantages, and modifications are within the claims.
What is claimed is:
We claim:
1. A sustained-release pharmaceutical composition for parenteral administration to a
subject, comprising a carrier peptide such as herein described, one or more therapeutic agent such
as herein described, and up to 30 percent, by weight, of a pharmaceutically acceptable,
monomeric, soluble carrier, wherein said composition automatically forms a gel after interaction
with said subject"s bodily fluids, said gel releasing said carrier peptide and any said therapeutic
agent continuously within the patient over an extended period of time.
2. A composition as claimed in claim 1, wherein said carrier peptide is selected from the
group consisting of somatostatin or a somatostatin analog; luteinizing hormone releasing
hormone (LHRH) analog; growth hormone releasing factor (GRF); parathyroid hormone (PTH);
parathyroid hormone related protein (PTHrp); calcitonin; or a soluble, biologically active analog
of GRF, PTH, PTHrp, or calcitonin.
3. A semisolid, sustained-release pharmaceutical suspension for parenteral administration
to a subject, said suspension consisting essentially of:
(1) a carrier peptide such as herein described, one or more therapeutic agents such as
herein described, and up to 30 percent, by weight, of a pharmaceutically acceptable, soluble,
monomeric carrier, wherein said carrier peptide salt and said carrier are soluble in aqueous
solvents; and
(2) an aqueous solvent in an amount less than 50 percent of the amount of solvent
required to dissolve said carrier peptide, wherein said semisolid suspension automatically forms
a gel after interaction with the subject"s bodily fluids, said gel releasing said carrier peptide and
any said therapeutic agent continuously within the patient over an extended period time.
4. A suspension as claimed in claim 3, wherein said amount of solvent is less than 10
percent of the amount of solvent required to dissolve said carrier peptide.
5. A suspension as claimed in claim 3, wherein said carrier peptide is selected from the
group consisting of somatostatin or a somatostatin analog; a luteinizing hormone releasing
hormone (LHRH) analog; growth hormone releasing factor (GRF); parathyroid hormone (PTH);
parathyroid hormone related protein (PTHrp); calcitonin; or a soluble, biologically active analog
of GRF, PTH, PTHrp, or calcitonin.
6. A sustained-release gel formed within a patient, said gel comprising
a pharmaceutical composition consisting essentially of a carrier peptide such as herein
described, one or more therapeutic agents such as herein described, and up to 30 percent, by
weight, of a pharmaceutically acceptable, soluble, monomeric carrier, wherein said carrier
peptide and said carrier are soluble in aqueous liquids; and
one or more bodily fluids of the patient, wherein said carrier peptide automatically forms
said gel after interaction with said bodily fluids, and said gel releases said carrier peptide and any
said therapeutic agent continuously within the patient over an extended period time.
7. A gel as claimed in claim 6, wherein said pharmaceutical composition is a solid.
8. A gel of claim 7, wherein said pharmaceutical composition further comprises a solvent
in an amount less than 50 percent of the amount of solvent required to dissolve said carrier
peptide and to provide said pharmaceutical composition with a semisolid consistency.
9. A composition as claimed in claim 1 or claim 2 wherein said therapeutic agent is a
dopamine agonist or antagonist, or a pharmaceutically acceptable salt thereof.
10. A composition as claimed in claim 9 wherein said dopamine agonist is amantadine,
bromocriptine, cabergoline, lisuride, mesulergine, pergolide, pramipexole, quinagolide, or
ropinirole, or a pharmaceutically acceptable salt or analog thereof.
11. A composition as claimed in claim 10 wherein said dopamine agonist is cabergoline,
or a pharmaceutically acceptable salt thereof.
12. A suspension as claimed in claim 3, 4, or 5, wherein said therapeutic agent is a
dopamine agonist or antagonist, or a pharmaceutically acceptable salt thereof.
13. A suspension as claimed in claim 12 wherein said dopamine agonist is amantadine,
bromocriptine, cabergoline, lisuride, mesulergine, pergolide, pramipexole, quinagolide, or
ropinirole, or a pharmaceutically acceptable salt or analog thereof.
14. A suspension as claimed in claim 13, wherein said dopamine agonist is cabergoiine,
or a pharmaceutically acceptable salt thereof.
15. A sustained-release gel as claimed in claim 6, 7, or 8, wherein said therapeutic agent
is a dopamine agonist or antagonist, or a pharmaceutically acceptable salt thereof.
16. A sustained-release gel as claimed in claim 15 wherein said dopamine agonist is is
amantadine, bromocriptine, cabergoiine, lisuride, mesulergine, pergolide, pramipexole,
quinagolide, or ropinirole, or a pharmaceutically acceptable salt or analog thereof.
17. A sustained-release gel as claimed in claim 16 wherein said dopamine agonist is
cabergoiine, or a pharmaceutically acceptable salt thereof.
The invention features a method of administering one or more therapeutic agents to a patient and delivering said
agent or agents continuously over an extended period of time, said method comprising: obtaining a pharmaceutical composition including
a peptide carrier, one or more therapeutic agents, and up to 30 percent, by weight, of a pharmaceutically acceptable, soluble,
monomeric carrier, and parenterally administering said pharmaceutical composition to a subject by injection, wherein said composition
automatically forms a gel after interaction with the patient"s bodily fluids and releases said peptide carrier and said agent or
agents continuously within the patient over an extended period.

Documents:

01077-kolnp-2004-abstract.pdf

01077-kolnp-2004-claims.pdf

01077-kolnp-2004-correspondence.pdf

01077-kolnp-2004-description (complete).pdf

01077-kolnp-2004-form 1.pdf

01077-kolnp-2004-form 18.pdf

01077-kolnp-2004-form 3.pdf

01077-kolnp-2004-form 5.pdf

01077-kolnp-2004-gpa.pdf

01077-kolnp-2004-letter patent.pdf

01077-kolnp-2004-reply first examination report.pdf

01077-kolnp-2004-translated copy of priority document.pdf


Patent Number 216304
Indian Patent Application Number 01077/KOLNP/2004
PG Journal Number 11/2008
Publication Date 14-Mar-2008
Grant Date 12-Mar-2008
Date of Filing 28-Jul-2004
Name of Patentee SOCIETE DE CONSEILS DE RECHERCHES ET D'APPLICATIONS SCIENTIFIQUES, S.A.S.
Applicant Address 51-53,RUE DE DOCTEUR BLANCHE F-75016 FRANCE
Inventors:
# Inventor's Name Inventor's Address
1 MOREAU JACQUES -PIERRE 159 WESBORE ROAD UPTON USA.
2 CHERIF-CHEIKH R4OLAND PASSEO FORIGOIA 12 SPAIN
PCT International Classification Number A01K9/06
PCT International Application Number PCT/US03/06676
PCT International Filing date 2003-03-04
PCT Conventions:
# PCT Application Number Date of Convention Priority Country
1 60/361,592 2002-03-04 U.S.A.