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ForumsVerified VendorsWWB semaglutide stability test — 12 month update

WWB semaglutide stability test — 12 month update

Dr.SleepRoch Thu, Aug 29, 2024 at 12:39 AM 12 replies 1,763 viewsPage 1 of 3
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Dr.SleepRoch
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Apr 2024
Rochester, MN
Aug 29, 2024 at 2:04 AM#1
I ran a 30-day stability test on reconstituted WWB semaglutide to answer the question everyone asks: "How long does reconstituted sema last in the fridge?" Methodology: - Product: WWB Semaglutide 10mg, batch #WS-SEM-2026-0203 - Reconstituted with 1mL bacteriostatic water (0.9% benzyl alcohol) - Stored at 4°C (standard refrigerator) in original vial - Sent aliquots to Janoshik at Day 0, Day 10, Day 20, and Day 30 - Each test was standard HPLC purity analysis 📋 Results: | Time Point | HPLC Purity | Degradation from Day 0 | |-----------|-------------|----------------------| | Day 0 | 99.1% | — | | Day 10 | 98.9% | -0.2% | | Day 20 | 98.5% | -0.6% | | Day 30 | 97.8% | -1.3% | Key Takeaway: WWB semaglutide maintained >97.5% purity through 30 days when reconstituted with BAC water and stored at 4°C. The degradation rate was approximately 0.043% per day, which is very reasonable. This means a reconstituted vial is perfectly usable for a full month. You could probably push it to 45 days before hitting 97% but I wouldn't go much beyond that. Total testing cost for this experiment: $540 (4x Janoshik panels). Expensive, but now we all have real data instead of guessing. 🔬
21 17sarah_TO, wendy_avl, jason_paloalto and 18 others
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Dr.ReproEndo
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Jan 2024
Scottsdale, AZ
Aug 29, 2024 at 2:21 AM#2
This is phenomenal data. $540 well spent for the community. A few questions about methodology: 1. Did you use a sterile technique when drawing aliquots? Cross-contamination could accelerate degradation. 2. Was the refrigerator temperature stable at 4°C or did it fluctuate (door opening, etc.)? 3. Did you notice any visual changes — cloudiness, particulates, color change? The 0.043%/day degradation rate is actually better than I expected. Some published literature on reconstituted semaglutide suggests 0.05-0.08%/day for generic formulations.
35 24andrew_nyc, Dr.EndoEP, GraceAZ_72 and 32 others
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Dr.DermMIA
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May 2024
Miami, FL
Aug 29, 2024 at 2:38 AM#3
Great questions: 1. Yes, sterile technique throughout. Wiped stoppers with 70% IPA before each draw, used fresh sterile syringes, worked near a flame. I'm a biochem postdoc so this is second nature. 2. I used a dedicated mini-fridge with a digital thermometer logging temps every 30 min. Range was 3.2-5.1°C with an average of 4.1°C. No significant excursions. 3. No visual changes at any point. Solution remained perfectly clear and colorless from day 0 through day 30. > The 0.043%/day degradation rate is actually better than I expected I was pleasantly surprised too. The bacteriostatic water quality matters — I used Hospira brand BAC water, which is pharmaceutical grade. Cheap BAC water with impurities could accelerate degradation.
11 2A1cHero_PHX, Dr.RenalNash, LipidDoc_ATL and 8 others
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PharmacoVig_BOS
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Feb 2024
Boston, MA
Aug 29, 2024 at 2:55 AM#4
Let me translate this for the non-scientists: your reconstituted WWB sema is fine in the fridge for a month. Use bacteriostatic water, not plain sterile water. Keep it cold. You're good. Most people go through a 10mg vial in 2-4 weeks anyway at standard dosing, so this confirms what many of us assumed — the vial doesn't go bad before you finish it. Thanks for the breakdown, this is a genuinely useful contribution. 👏
Last edited: Aug 29, 2024 at 5:55 AM
34 23kate.chem, DataDave, Dr.GutHealth and 31 others
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COA_Karl
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Jan 2024
Pennsylvania
Aug 29, 2024 at 3:12 AM#5
I did a similar (less rigorous) test with QSC semaglutide last year and found roughly 0.06%/day degradation under similar conditions. So WWB's product appears to be slightly more stable post-reconstitution. This could be due to: - Higher initial purity (less impurities to catalyze degradation) - Better lyophilization process (affects reconstituted stability) - Differences in residual solvents/salts Whatever the reason, it's another data point in WWB's favor for quality. The lyophilization quality really does seem to matter for post-recon stability.
2 21LindaRN_retired, tommy_boulder
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