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Injectability

When it comes to injecting a vaccine, comfort is key. The viscosity of the injectable has a great impact on perceived injection pain. Low-viscosity injections are perceived to be more painful than higher-viscosity injections. However, too-high viscosity can lead to an injection system occlusion, which makes completing the injection difficult and is therefore a risk for patients. In addition, viscosity affects the injection time and the choice of the needle diameter. To avoid degradation and aggregation upon injection, high forces, occurring when vaccine formulations are pushed through narrow apertures in the syringe and small-bore needles, need to be accurately measured and controlled. Analyze the flow behavior of the sample and use it to optimize the viscosity to ensure proper injection, and measure how the shear forces during an injection affect the flow properties and the overall stability of vaccine formulations. With our portfolio of measuring instruments, you can analyze and optimize these parameters to ensure proper vaccine development and quality control.

Learn more about our solutions for injectability below.

Viscosity checks of the sample to ensure injectability/administrability

Challenge

The viscosity of the injectable has a significant impact on perceived injection pain. Low viscosity injections of 1 mPa*s are perceived to be more painful than higher viscosity injections of 15-20 mPa*s. However, a too-high viscosity can lead to an injection system occlusion, which makes completing the injection difficult and is therefore a risk for patients. Viscosity also affects the injection time and the choice of the needle diameter.

Furthermore, the volume of the drug can be decreased with a more viscous solution.

Solution

Measure viscosity at multiple shear rates/speeds with ViscoQC 300 or LOVIS 2000 M/ME, depending on analysis needs. Analyze the flow behavior of the sample and use it to optimize the viscosity to ensure proper injection.

Benefits

Obtain data to ensure a safe and painless injection for the patient.

For the measurement with ViscoQC 300, digital leveling eliminates incorrect results thanks to fully automatic level checking. Automatic spindle and guard detection ensure correct viscosity calculation. LOVIS 2000 M or ME provide short measurement times and low sample volumes of only 1 mL for your precious samples.

With all instruments, the software conforms to 21 CFR Part 11 regulations. Especially with V-Comply for the ViscoQC 300, the pharma qualification documentation is already included.

Additional information

Instruments:

Check the pH value of your vaccine to control a risk factor for phlebitis

Challenge

Vaccine injections can cause phlebitis. The pH value of the substances involved and the final vaccine are a key risk factor for this. Measuring this value alongside other generally measured quality control parameters (e.g., density) must be easy.

Solution

Measure density, viscosity, and pH simultaneously in a modular set-up to check and control key product parameters – especially with regard to setting a suitable pH to reduce the likelihood of phlebitis occurring.

Benefits

Instrument modularity and fast measurements save time and costs compared to individually operated instruments, while providing all advanced technological and software features of the individual instruments and modules. The pH ME module is an easy-to-connect extension for an Anton Paar density meter or Lovis 2000 viscometer.

Key benefits are the additionally possible automatic calculation of all relevant parameters and the integration of necessary measurement data into one single data set. The small sample consumption (13 mL) and single filling of the system are additional advantages.

How shear forces affect vaccine stability

Challenge

During the injection of a vaccine into a patient, there are surprisingly high forces that occur because the vaccine formulation is forced through narrow apertures in the syringe as well as through a small-bore needle. These forces, if not measured and controlled, can cause degradation or aggregation of the active agent in the vaccine formulation. If a vaccine degrades or aggregates upon injection, the patient may receive a sub-therapeutic dose, or the aggregated particles may cause an immunogenic response.

Solution

A Modular Compact Rheometer (MCR) from Anton Paar directly measures how the shear forces that occur during an injection affect the structural and flow properties as well as the overall stability of vaccine formulations.

Benefits

Accurately characterizing how a vaccine formulation responds to the shear stresses that occur during injections helps detect and avoid injection-induced aggregation or degradation of the formulation. This ensures a safe and complete dose for each patient.

Additional information

Instruments:

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