New Quality Control Method to Select Effective MβCD for Treating Neimann-Pick Disease


Medicine, Health Care New Quality Control Method to…

Published: September 20, 2017.
Released by Mary Ann Liebert, Inc./Genetic Engineering News

New Rochelle, September 20, 2017-Researchers have developed a quality control method to evaluate the pharmacological activity and potential effectiveness of different preparations of the therapeutic agent methyl-?-cyclodextrin (M?CD). Distinct batches of M?CD produced by different commercial laboratories may be more or less effective in reducing the cholesterol that accumulates in the fibroblasts of patients with the lysosomal storage disorder Niemann-Pick disease type C1. This new set of methods for selecting an optimal cyclodextrin preparation is described in ASSAY and Drug Development Technologies, a peer-reviewed journal from Mary Ann Liebert, Inc., publishers. The article is available free on the ASSAY and Drug Development Technologies website.

Wei Zheng, PhD, National Center for Advancing Translational Sciences, National Institutes of Health (Bethesda, MD) and coauthors from the NIH, Poochon Scientific (Frederick, MD), and Washington University School of Medicine (St. Louis, MO), developed an analytical method that they used to characterize three preparations of M?CD. The researchers found differences in average molecular weight and side chain methylation in M?CD samples from different vendors and batches. They discuss the potential impact of these differences on the ability of M?CD to reduce lysosomal cholesterol accumulation in the article entitled “Analytical Characterization of Methyl-?-Cyclodextrin for Pharmacological Activity to Reduce Lysosomal Cholesterol Accumulation in Niemann-Pick Disease Type C1 Cells.”

“This scientific disclosure highlights the importance of consistency in batch production of M?CD. Without this technology, there would be little promise to develop a clinical treatment for these patients, many of whom are young children,” says ASSAY and Drug Development Technologies Editor-in-Chief Bruce Melancon, PhD, Managing Director of the Chemical Synthesis and Drug Discovery facility at the University of Notre Dame.


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