Categories for Scientific publication

PUBLICATION: Continuous Microfluidic Antisolvent Crystallization as a Bottom-Up Solution for the Development of Long-Acting Injectable Formulations

Nandi, S. et al. Continuous Microfluidic Antisolvent Crystallization as a Bottom-Up Solution for the Development of Long-Acting Injectable Formulations. Pharmaceutics 2024, 16, 376. https://doi.org/10.3390/pharmaceutics16030376

Abstract

A bottom-up approach was investigated to produce long-acting injectable (LAI) suspension-based formulations to overcome specific limitations of top-down manufacturing methods by tailoring drug characteristics while making the methods more sustainable and cost-efficient. A Secoya microfluidic crystallization technology-based continuous liquid antisolvent crystallization (SCT-CLASC) process was optimized and afterwards compared to an earlier developed microchannel reactor-based continuous liquid antisolvent crystallization (MCR-CLASC) setup, using itraconazole (ITZ) as the model drug. After operating parameter optimization and downstream processing (i.e., concentrating the suspensions), stable micro suspensions were generated with a final solid loading of 300 mg ITZ/g suspension. The optimized post-precipitation feed suspension consisted of 40 mg ITZ/g suspension with a drug-to-excipient ratio of 53:1. Compared to the MCR-CLASC setup, where the post-precipitation feed suspensions contained 10 mg ITZ/g suspension and had a drug-to-excipient ratio of 2:1, a higher drug concentration and lower excipient use were successfully achieved to produce LAI microsuspensions using the SCT-CLASC setup. To ensure stability during drug crystallization and storage, the suspensions’ quality was monitored for particle size distribution (PSD), solid-state form, and particle morphology. The PSD of the ITZ crystals in suspension was maintained within the target range of 1–10  m, while the crystals displayed an elongated plate-shaped morphology and the solid state was confirmed to be form I, which is the most thermodynamically stable form of ITZ. In conclusion, this work lays the foundation for the SCT-CLASC process as an energy-efficient, robust, and reproducible bottom-up approach for the manufacture of LAI microsuspensions using ITZ at an industrial scale.

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ACS publication: Parameter Optimization from Laboratory- to Kilogram Pilot-Scale Operations in Crystallization

BREAKING NEWS! Our recent work on the continuous nucleation process of lactose and adipic acid has been published on the American Chemical Society website.

Read our publication (https://doi.org/10.1021/acs.oprd.3c00132) to discover how Secoya Crystallization Technology (SCT) and its equipment allow crystallization experts to obtain a set of optimal parameters from a small amount of material to be used seamlessly at a pilot scale. A scalable process enabling full continuous production of nucleated slurry.

Congratulations to Bart Rimez
, Benoit Scheid
and Robin Debuysschère (Université libre de Bruxelles) for achieving this!

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BACTERIA AND YEAST ENCAPSULATION METHOD IN SMALL DOUBLE EMULSIONS

Abstract

The precise manipulation, quick cultivation, and delicate detection of yeast and bacteria are crucial in microbiology and biomedicine for behavior monitoring, identification of phenotypes, physiological assessment, and molecular analysis.

Microfluidic droplets have proven to be an effective method for encapsulating yeast and bacteria in highly monodisperse droplets for high-throughput screening and analysis of their phenotypes, subcellular structures, genes, and metabolites.This application note details the encapsulation of the yeast strain S. cerevisiae CEN.PK 113-7D and the bacterial strain L. cremorsi MG1363_GFP in double emulsions of 42 µm size using the Cell Encapsulation Platform, resulting in Microencapsulation of Bacteria and Yeast.

Single crystal formation in core-shell capsules (ChemComm Oct.23)

Imagine, that you can easily produce solid microcapsules acting as independent crystallization vessels for both small and macromolecular molecules. Even more, imagine their remarkable stability allows you to handle those microcapsules and transport them without any limitations or constraints.

This is exactly what has been demonstrated by our team in this new publication entitled: “Single crystal formation in core-shell capsules” (ChemComm Oct.23). A unique process made possible only with Secoya’s Raydrop® innovative device.

 Curious about this breakthrough microfluidic process? Download the publication or contact us: https://lnkd.in/e76faVcc

Publication on Raydrop

Adrien Dewandre and Youen Vitry, Technology leads at Secoya, and Benoit Scheid, Chairman of the Board of Secoya and Maître de Recherche FNRS at ULB, were involved in an experimental and numerical study of the Secoya droplet generator, the Raydrop. Their work on “Microfluidic droplet generation in a non-embedded co-flow-focusing using 3D printed nozzle” is published in the journal Scientific Reports.

Publication of complex systems modeling

26/08/2020

Jean Septavaux, Technology lead at Secoya has been involved in the modelling of complex molecular systems with the CSAp lab from the University of Lyon. Their work on “The dark side of disulfide-based dynamic combinatorial chemistry” was published in the journal Chemical Science

Hydrodynamics matters to control the crystallization of API

3/02/2020

Dr. Bart Rimez, co-founder and Crystallization Technology Lead, was invited to publish in the Emerging Scientists issue of Journal of Flow Chemistry, coming out beginning 2020. The paper deals with our findings on the synergistic effect of nucleation thermodynamics and hydrodynamics to increase nucleation rate. Read more

Intensification for sustainability

13/01/2020

Would it be possible to valorise a waste stream… by purifying another ? Dr. Jean Septavaux, co-founder of Secoya Technologies, co-authored a paper in Nature Chemistry describing a methodology for the convergent purification of electronic and gas waste streams.  By using the unique properties of polyamines solutions upon capture of CO2 from car exhaust fumes, the authors manage to separate with a high selectivity the valuables metals contained in a dissolved car battery electrode.

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