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Cagrilintide

AM-833, Long-acting amylin analogue

Quick Stats
Studies 57
Trials 38
Score 3
2021 pubmed 12 citations

Amyloidogenicity of peptides targeting diabetes and obesity.

Lima. Luís Maurício T R LMTR; Icart. Luis Peña LP

Key Findings

  • Therapeutic peptides (including cagrilintide) are prone to forming high‑molecular‑weight aggregates that can diminish activity.
  • Improper formulation, storage temperature, pH, or mechanical stress can trigger amyloid or amorphous aggregation.
  • Analytical methods (e.g., spectroscopy, chromatography) exist to detect aggregation, and formulation strategies (excipients, stabilizers) can mitigate it.

Practical Outcomes

  • When using cagrilintide or similar peptides, keep them refrigerated, avoid repeated freeze‑thaw cycles, and use only the recommended diluents. If you must reconstitute the peptide yourself, do it gently, avoid shaking, and use fresh solutions for each dose. Consider adding approved stabilizers if you’re compounding, and periodically check for cloudiness or precipitates, which may signal loss of potency.

Summary

The review warns that peptide drugs like cagrilintide can clump together into larger, inactive forms (amyloid or amorphous aggregates) if they aren't stored, handled, or formulated correctly. These clumps can reduce the drug’s effectiveness and may trigger immune reactions, so paying attention to stability is crucial for anyone using these peptides outside a clinical setting.

Abstract

Since the discovery of insulin, a century ago, the repertoire of therapeutic polypeptides targeting diabetes - and now also obesity - have increased substantially. The focus on quality has shifted from impure and unstable preparations of animal insulin to highly pure, homologous recombinant insulin, along with other peptide-based hormones and analogs such as amylin analogs (pramlintide, davalintide, cagrilintide), glucagon and glucagon-like peptide-1 receptor agonists (GLP-1, liraglutide, exenatide, semaglutide). Proper formulation, storage, manipulation and usage by professionals and patients are required in order to avoid agglomeration into high molecular weight products (HMWP), either amorphous or amyloid, which could result in potential loss of biological activity and short- or long-term immune reaction and silent inactivation. In this narrative review, we present perspective of the aggregation of therapeutic polypeptides used in diabetes and other metabolic diseases, covering the nature and mechanisms, analytical techniques, physical and chemical stability, strategies aimed to hamper the formation of HMWP, and perspectives on future biopharmaceutical developments.

Study Information

Provider

pubmed

Year

2021

Date

2021-10-12T00:00:00.000Z

DOI

10.1016/j.colsurfb.2021.112157

Citations

12

References

160