American Chemical Society
Browse
bm1c00474_si_001.pdf (1.68 MB)

Engineering Insulin Cold Chain Resilience to Improve Global Access

Download (1.68 MB)
journal contribution
posted on 2021-07-02, 19:44 authored by Caitlin L. Maikawa, Joseph L. Mann, Aadithya Kannan, Catherine M. Meis, Abigail K. Grosskopf, Ben S. Ou, Anton A. A. Autzen, Gerald G. Fuller, David M. Maahs, Eric A. Appel
There are 150 million people with diabetes worldwide who require insulin replacement therapy, and the prevalence of diabetes is rising the fastest in middle- and low-income countries. The current formulations require costly refrigerated transport and storage to prevent loss of insulin integrity. This study shows the development of simple “drop-in” amphiphilic copolymer excipients to maintain formulation integrity, bioactivity, pharmacokinetics, and pharmacodynamics for over 6 months when subjected to severe stressed aging conditions that cause current commercial formulation to fail in under 2 weeks. Further, when these copolymers are added to Humulin R (Eli Lilly) in original commercial packaging, they prevent insulin aggregation for up to 4 days at 50 °C compared to less than 1 day for Humulin R alone. These copolymers demonstrate promise as simple formulation additives to increase the cold chain resilience of commercial insulin formulations, thereby expanding global access to these critical drugs for treatment of diabetes.

History