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1.
Int J Pharm ; 653: 123921, 2024 Mar 25.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38382769

ABSTRACT

Previous work demonstrated the benefits of dry coating fine-grade microcrystalline cellulose (MCC) for enabling direct compression (DC), a favored tablet manufacturing method, due to enhanced flowability while retaining good compactability of placebo and binary blends of cohesive APIs. Here, fine brittle excipients, Pharmatose 450 (P450, 19 µm) and Pharmatose 350 (P350, 29 µm), having both poor flowability and compactability are dry coated with silica A200 or R972P to assess DC capability of multi-component cohesive API (coarse acetaminophen, 22 µm, and ibuprofen50, 47 µm) blends. Dry coated P450 and P350 not only attained excellent flowability and high bulk density but also heightened tensile strength hence processability, which contrasts with reported reduction for dry coated ductile MCC. Although hydrophobic R972P imparted better flowability, hydrophilic A200 better enhanced tensile strength, hence selected for dry coating P450 in multi-component blends that included fine Avicel PH-105. For coarse acetaminophen blends, substantial bulk density and flowability increase without any detrimental effect on tensile strength were observed; a lesser amount of dry coated P450 was better. Increased flowability, bulk density, and tensile strength, hence enhanced processability by reaching DC capability, were observed for 60 wt% ibuprofen50, using only 18 wt% of the dry coated P450, i.e. 0.18 wt% silica in the blend.


Subject(s)
Acetaminophen , Excipients , Acetaminophen/chemistry , Drug Compounding , Excipients/chemistry , Lactose , Tablets/chemistry , Silicon Dioxide/chemistry , Particle Size , Powders/chemistry
2.
Pharm Res ; 40(12): 2917-2933, 2023 Dec.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37468827

ABSTRACT

PURPOSE: To investigate the effect of dry coating the amount and type of silica on powder flowability enhancement using a comprehensive set of 19 pharmaceutical powders having different sizes, surface roughness, morphology, and aspect ratios, as well as assess flow predictability via Bond number estimated using a mechanistic multi-asperity particle contact model. METHOD: Particle size, shape, density, surface energy and area, SEM-based morphology, and FFC were assessed for all powders. Hydrophobic (R972P) or hydrophilic (A200) nano-silica were dry coated for each powder at 25%, 50%, and 100% surface area coverage (SAC). Flow predictability was assessed via particle size and Bond number. RESULTS: Nearly maximal flow enhancement, one or more flow category, was observed for all powders at 50% SAC of either type of silica, equivalent to 1 wt% or less for both the hydrophobic R972P or hydrophilic A200, while R972P generally performed slightly better. Silica amount as SAC better helped understand the relative performance. The power-law relation between FFC and Bond number was observed. CONCLUSION: Significant flow enhancements were achieved at 50% SAC, validating previous models. Most uncoated very cohesive powders improved by two flow categories, attaining easy flow. Flowability could not be predicted for both the uncoated and dry coated powders via particle size alone. Prediction was significantly better using Bond number computed via the mechanistic multi-asperity particle contact model accounting for the particle size, surface energy, roughness, and the amount and type of silica. The widely accepted 200 nm surface roughness was not valid for most pharmaceutical powders.


Subject(s)
Silicon Dioxide , Silicon Dioxide/chemistry , Powders/chemistry , Particle Size , Hydrophobic and Hydrophilic Interactions , Drug Compounding
3.
J Pharm Sci ; 112(8): 2124-2136, 2023 08.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37230252

ABSTRACT

This paper considers two fine-sized (d50 ∼10 µm) model drugs, acetaminophen (mAPAP) and ibuprofen (Ibu), to examine the effect of API dry coprocessing on their multi-component medium DL (30 wt%) blends with fine excipients. The impact of blend mixing time on the bulk properties such as flowability, bulk density, and agglomeration was studied. The hypothesis tested is that blends with fine APIs at medium DL require good blend flowability to have good blend uniformity (BU). Moreover, the good flowability could be achieved through dry coating with hydrophobic (R972P) silica, which reduces agglomeration of not only fine API, but also of its blends while using fine excipients. For uncoated APIs, the blend flowability was poor, i.e. cohesive regime at all mixing times, and the blends failed to achieve acceptable BU. In contrast, for dry coated APIs, their blend flowability improved to easy-flow regime or better, improving with mixing time, and as hypothesized, all blends consequently achieved desired BU. All dry coated API blends exhibited improved bulk density and reduced agglomeration, attributed to mixing induced synergistic property enhancements, likely due to silica transfer. Despite coating with hydrophobic silica, tablet dissolution was improved, attributed to the reduced agglomeration of fine API.


Subject(s)
Excipients , Silicon Dioxide , Drug Compounding , Excipients/chemistry , Silicon Dioxide/chemistry , Powders/chemistry , Particle Size , Acetaminophen/chemistry
4.
Int J Pharm ; 635: 122722, 2023 Mar 25.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36796658

ABSTRACT

Although previous research demonstrated improved flowability, packing, fluidization, etc. of individual powders via nanoparticle dry coating, none considered its impact on very low drug loaded blends. Here, fine ibuprofen at 1, 3, and 5 wt% drug loadings (DL) was used in multi-component blends to examine the impact of the excipients size, dry coating with hydrophilic or hydrophobic silica, and mixing times on the blend uniformity, flowability and drug release rates. For uncoated active pharmaceutical ingredients (API), the blend uniformity (BU) was poor for all blends regardless of the excipient size and mixing time. In contrast, for dry coated API having low agglomerate ratio (AR), BU was dramatically improved, more so for the fine excipient blends, at lesser mixing times. For dry coated API, the fine excipient blends mixed for 30 min had enhanced flowability and lower AR; better for the lowest DL having lesser silica, likely due to mixing induced synergy of silica redistribution. For the fine excipient tablets, dry coating led to fast API release rates even with hydrophobic silica coating. Remarkably, the low AR of the dry coated API even at very low DL and amounts of silica in the blend led to the enhanced blend uniformity, flow, and API release rate.


Subject(s)
Cellulose , Excipients , Excipients/chemistry , Drug Compounding , Cellulose/chemistry , Particle Size , Powders/chemistry , Silicon Dioxide/chemistry
5.
AAPS PharmSciTech ; 24(1): 51, 2023 Jan 26.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36703032

ABSTRACT

A highly porous additive, Neusilin®, with high adsorption capability is investigated to improve bulk properties, hence processability of spray-dried amorphous solid dispersions (ASDs). Griseofulvin (GF) is applied as a model BCS class 2 drug in ASDs. Two grades of Neusilin®, US2 (coarser) and UFL2 (finer), were used as additives to produce spray-dried amorphous composite (AC) powders, and their performance was compared with the resulting ASDs without added Neusilin®. The resulting AC powders that included Neusilin® had greatly enhanced flowability (flow function coefficient (FFC) > 10) comparable to larger particles (100 µm) yet had finer particle size (< 50 µm), hence retaining the advantage of fast dissolution rate of finer sizes. Dissolution results demonstrated that achieved GF supersaturation for AC powders with Neusilin® was as high as 3 times that of crystalline GF concentration and was achieved within 30 min. In addition, 80% of drug was released within 4 min. The flowability improvement for AC powders with Neusilin® was more significant as compared to spray-dried ASDs without Neusilin®. Thus, the role of Neusilin® in flowability improvement was evident, considering that spray-dried AC with Neusilin® UFL2 has higher FFC than ASDs having a similar size. Lastly, the AC powders retained a fully amorphous state of GF after 3-month ambient storage. The overall results conveyed that the improved flowability and dissolution rate could outweigh the loss of drug loading resulted by addition of Neusilin®.


Subject(s)
Solubility , Powders/chemistry , Particle Size
7.
Pharmaceutics ; 14(11)2022 Oct 27.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36365124

ABSTRACT

The robustness of 3D-printed mini-tablets as a platform to administer milligram dosages, intended for age-specific therapy, without the need of tablet splitting while maintaining similar release profiles, was investigated. Griseofulvin, as a model poorly water-soluble drug, and hydroxypropyl cellulose along with Kollicoat Protect as polymers were used to prepare filaments at 1-20% drug concentrations via hot-melt extrusion (HME). Higher drug concentrations served for testing the feasibility of a reduced number of mini-tablets to be administered. A reliable dose titration in the range 0.19-3.91 mg at a high accuracy (R2 of 0.999) was achieved through composite unit (multi-unit) mini-tablets. All mini-tablets produced had excellent content uniformity and their label claim values were within the acceptable range, proving that HME processing followed by 3D printing promotes content uniformity even for mini-tablets containing low drug doses (0.19 mg). Remarkably, the proposed approach allowed achieving similar drug release profiles via composite unit mini-tablets as well as single mini-tablets at high drug concentrations. In contrast, split tablets demonstrated different release behaviors, attributed to their size and shape differences. Overall, the distinct advantages of mini-tablets to provide dose flexibility while maintaining similar release profiles was demonstrated.

8.
Cartilage ; 13(3): 19476035221113959, 2022.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36040157

ABSTRACT

OBJECTIVE: Intervertebral disk degeneration is a prevalent postoperative complication after discectomy, underscoring the need to develop preventative and bioactive treatment strategies that decelerate degeneration and seal annulus fibrosus (AF) defects. Human mesenchymal stem cell-derived exosomes (MSC-Exos) hold promise for cell-free bioactive repair; however, their ability to promote AF repair is poorly understood. The objective of this study was to evaluate the ability of MSC-Exos to promote endogenous AF repair processes and integrate MSC-Exos within a biomaterial delivery system. DESIGN: We characterize biophysical and biochemical properties of normoxic (Nx) and hypoxic (Hx) preconditioned MSC-Exos from young, healthy donors and examine their effects on AF cell proliferation, migration, and gene expression. We then integrate a poly(lactic-co-glycolic acid) microsphere (PLGA µSphere) delivery platform within an interpenetrating network hydrogel to facilitate sustained MSC-Exo delivery. RESULTS: Hx MSC-Exos led to a more robust response in AF cell proliferation and migration than Nx MSC-Exos and was selected for a downstream protection experiment. Hx MSC-Exos maintained a healthy AF cell phenotype under a TNFα challenge in vitro and attenuated catabolic responses. In all functional assays, AF cell responses were more sensitive to Hx MSC-Exos than Nx MSC-Exos. PLGA µSpheres released MSC-Exos over a clinically relevant timescale without affecting hydrogel modulus or pH upon initial embedment and µSphere degradation. CONCLUSIONS: This MSC-Exo treatment strategy may offer benefits of stem cell therapy without the need for exogenous stem cell transplantation by stimulating cell proliferation, promoting cell migration, and protecting cells from the degenerative proinflammatory microenvironment.


Subject(s)
Annulus Fibrosus , Exosomes , Mesenchymal Stem Cells , Exosomes/genetics , Exosomes/metabolism , Glycols/metabolism , Humans , Hydrogels , Mesenchymal Stem Cells/metabolism , Microspheres , Polylactic Acid-Polyglycolic Acid Copolymer/metabolism
9.
Pharm Res ; 39(12): 3155-3174, 2022 Dec.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35882741

ABSTRACT

PURPOSE: The impact of dry coating on reduced API agglomeration remains underexplored. Therefore, this work quantified fine cohesive API agglomeration reduction through dry coating and its impact on enhanced blend uniformity and processability, i.e., flowability and bulk density of multi-component blends API loading as low as 1 wt%. METHODS: The impact of dry coating with two different types and amounts of silica was assessed on cohesion, agglomeration, flowability, bulk density, wettability, and surface energy of fine milled ibuprofen (~ 10 µm). API agglomeration, measured using Gradis/QicPic employing gentler gravity-based dispersion, resulted in excellent size resolution. Multi-component blends with fine-sized excipients, selected for reduced segregation potential, were tested for bulk density, cohesion, flowability, and blend content uniformity. Tablets formed using these blends were tested for tensile strength and dissolution. RESULT: All dry coated ibuprofen powders exhibited dramatic agglomeration reduction, corroborated by corresponding decreased cohesion, unconfined yield strength, and improved flowability, regardless of the type and amount of silica coating. Their blends exhibited profound enhancement in flowability and bulk density even at low API loadings, as well as the content uniformity for the lowest drug loading. Moreover, hydrophobic silica coating improved drug dissolution rate without appreciably reducing tablet tensile strength. CONCLUSION: The dry coating based reduced agglomeration of fine APIs for all three low drug loadings improved overall blend properties (uniformity, flowability, API release rate) due to the synergistic impact of a minute amount of silica (0.007 wt %), potentially enabling direct compression tableting and aiding manufacturing of other forms of solid dosing.


Subject(s)
Excipients , Ibuprofen , Drug Compounding/methods , Ibuprofen/chemistry , Particle Size , Excipients/chemistry , Silicon Dioxide/chemistry , Tablets/chemistry , Powders/chemistry
10.
Pharm Res ; 39(12): 3079-3098, 2022 Dec.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35698012

ABSTRACT

PURPOSE: Fine API agglomeration and its mitigation via particle engineering, i.e., dry coating, remains underexplored. The purpose was to investigate agglomeration before and after dry coating of fine cohesive APIs and impact on powder processability, i.e., flowability (FFC), bulk density (BD), and dissolution of BCS Class II drugs. METHOD: Ibuprofen (three sizes), fenofibrate, and griseofulvin (5-20 µm), before and after dry coating with varying amounts of hydrophobic (R972P) or hydrophilic (A200) nano- silica, were assessed for agglomeration, FFC, BD, surface energy, wettability, and dissolution. The granular Bond number (Bog), a dimensionless parameter, evaluated through material-sparing particle-scale measures and particle-contact models, was used to express relative powder cohesion. RESULTS: Significant powder processability improvements after dry coating were observed: FFC increased by multiple flow regimes, BD increased by 25-100%, agglomerate ratio (AR) reduction by over an order of magnitude, and greatly enhanced API dissolution rate even with hydrophobic (R972P) silica coating. Scrutiny of particle-contact models revealed non-triviality in estimating API surface roughness, which was managed through the assessment of measured bulk properties. A power-law correlation was identified between AR and Bog and subsequently, between AR and FFC & bulk density; AR below 5 ensured improved processability and dissolution. CONCLUSION: Agglomeration, an overlooked material-sparing measure for powder cohesiveness, was a key indicator of powder processability and dissolution. The significant agglomerate reduction was possible via dry coating with either silica type at adequate surface area coverage. Reduced agglomeration after dry coating also countered the adverse impact of increased surface hydrophobicity on dissolution.


Subject(s)
Ibuprofen , Silicon Dioxide , Powders/chemistry , Particle Size , Ibuprofen/chemistry , Silicon Dioxide/chemistry , Wettability
11.
Pharmaceutics ; 13(11)2021 Nov 04.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34834272

ABSTRACT

Filaments loaded with griseofulvin (GF), a model poorly water-soluble drug, were prepared and used for 3D printing via fused deposition modeling (FDM). GF was selected due to its high melting temperature, enabling lower temperature hot-melt extrusion (HME) keeping GF largely crystalline in the filaments, which could help mitigate the disadvantages of high HME processing temperatures such as filament quality, important for printability and the adverse effects of GF recrystallization on tablet properties. Novel aspects include single-step fusion-assisted ASDs generation during FDM 3D printing and examining the impact of tablet surface areas (SA) through printing multi-mini and square-pattern perforated tablets to further enhance drug supersaturation during dissolution. Kollicoat protect and hydroxypropyl cellulose were selected due to their low miscibility with GF, necessary to produce crystalline filaments. The drug solid-state was assessed via XRPD, DSC and FT-IR. At 165 °C HME processing temperature, the filaments containing ~80% crystalline GF were printable. Fusion-assisted 3D printing led to GF supersaturation of ~153% for cylindrical tablets and ~293% with the square-pattern perforated tablets, indicating strong monotonous impact of tablet SA. Dissolution kinetics of drug release profiles indicated Fickian transport for tablets with higher SA, demonstrating greater SA-induced drug supersaturation for well-designed 3D printed tablets.

12.
Int J Pharm ; 606: 120853, 2021 Sep 05.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34252519

ABSTRACT

The impact of dry coating with hydrophobic or hydrophilic nano-silica at 25-100% surface area coverage on dissolution of micronized poorly water-soluble drugs was investigated by examining their agglomeration and surface hydrophobicity. Ibuprofen (20 µm and 10 µm) and griseofulvin (10 µm) were selected having differing solubility, hydrophobicity, and surface morphology. Characterization involved particle agglomeration via two dry dispersion methods, drug dissolution using the USP IV method, cohesion reduction through shear testing, and powder wettability via the modified Washburn method. Dry coating dramatically reduced the cohesion hence agglomerate size of both the coated ibuprofen particles, but less for griseofulvin, attributed to its surface morphology. For hydrophobic silica, agglomerate size reduction outweighed the adverse impact of increased surface hydrophobicity for ibuprofen. For griseofulvin, the agglomerate reduction was much lower, not able to overcome the effect of increased drug particle hydrophobicity with hydrophobic silica coating. Hydrophilic silica coating reduced hydrophobicity for all three drug powders, leading to the synergistic improvement in the dissolution along with agglomerate size reduction. Overall, the combined effect of the drug particle surface hydrophobicity and agglomerate size, represented by specific surface area, could explain the dissolution behavior of these poorly water-soluble drugs.


Subject(s)
Water , Hydrophobic and Hydrophilic Interactions , Particle Size , Powders , Solubility
13.
Pharmaceutics ; 13(6)2021 May 29.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34072382

ABSTRACT

The impact of mixer type and critical process parameters (CPPs) on critical quality attributes (CQAs), including the drug content uniformity (CU) of slurry-cast polymer films loaded with micro-sized poorly water-soluble drugs were investigated. Previously untested hypothesis was that the best mixer at suitable CPPs promotes uniform drug dispersion within film precursors leading to acceptable dried-film CU at low, ~0.6 wt% drug concentrations. Taguchi design was utilized to select the best of three mixers; low-shear impeller, high-shear planetary, and high-intensity vibrational, for dried-film drug concentration of ~23 wt%. As-received fenofibrate, a model poorly water-soluble drug (~6 µm) was directly mixed with the hydroxypropyl methylcellulose (HPMC) and glycerin aqueous solution. Impeller and planetary mixers yielded desirable film relative standard deviation (RSD), while vibrational mixer could not. For the lowest dried-film drug concentration of ~0.6 wt%, only planetary mixer yielded RSD <6%. The precursor drug homogeneity was a sufficient but not a necessary condition for achieving dried-film RSD <6%. Thus, proper selection of mixer and its CPPs assured desirable film CQAs. However, minor drug particle aggregation was identified via re-dispersion testing which also led to incomplete drug release.

14.
Int J Pharm ; 591: 119987, 2020 Dec 15.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33069894

ABSTRACT

The aim of this paper was to explore tablet design options for FDM 3D printing for simultaneous tailoring of drug release and dose. The drug, griseofulvin (GF), the polymer, hydroxypropyl cellulose (HPC), and processing temperatures were selected to avoid confounding effects arising from drug-polymer interactions. Filaments containing 0-30 wt% GF were prepared using a twin-screw extruder. Five tablet designs were printed using combinations of fixed or varying drug-concentration filaments, fixed or varying tablet sizes, or placebo and drug-rich regions. Two of five options met the main objective; varying drug-concentration filaments for fixed tablet size or printing fixed size duo-tablet having internal placebo regions of varying sizes. Analysis of the drug dissolution profiles revealed that the tablet surface area to volume (SA/V) ratio was the dominant factor, a higher SA/V ratio resulted in a faster release rate, mostly independent of the drug amount or its placement within the tablet. Use of HPC led to near zero-order release for most cases. For duo-tablets, long lag times proportional to placebo shell-thickness were observed. These results suggest that design options other than varying the tablet size would be needed to achieve desired drug release from FDM-based 3D printed personalized dosages.


Subject(s)
Polymers , Printing, Three-Dimensional , Drug Liberation , Tablets , Technology, Pharmaceutical , Temperature
15.
Carbohydr Polym ; 250: 117012, 2020 Dec 15.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33049873

ABSTRACT

The combined effect of solvent, cellulosic polymer, and a poorly water-soluble drug, fenofibrate (FNB) on solution-cast pharmaceutical film quality attributes, e.g., morphology, drug recrystallization, content uniformity, mechanical properties, dissolution rate and supersaturation level, was investigated. Film morphology, content uniformity, and mechanical properties were impacted by the extent of FNB recrystallization which was strongly affected by FNB solubility in the solvent as compared to the polymer type, hydroxypropyl methylcellulose or hydroxypropyl cellulose. FNB recrystallization affected drug dissolution rates and supersaturation under non-sink conditions. Specifically, the area under the curve linearly correlated with recrystallization. After one-year storage, FNB recrystallization reached very high levels even for the films with no initial recrystallization, suggesting low initial crystallinity does not guarantee stability. Thus, uncontrolled recrystallization and poor time-stability would be unavoidable for solution-cast films. Overall, both the polymer and the solvent strongly impact drug recrystallization, film structure, mechanical properties, dissolution rate, and supersaturation.


Subject(s)
Fenofibrate/chemistry , Hypromellose Derivatives/chemistry , Nanoparticles/chemistry , Polymers/chemistry , Solvents/chemistry , Water/chemistry , Solubility
16.
Eur J Pharm Sci ; 151: 105408, 2020 Aug 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32502519

ABSTRACT

Recent work showed that contrary to conventional wisdom, fine surface engineered excipients outperform their larger counterparts in blends of highly loaded blends of cohesive drug powders in terms of their packing, flowability and tablet tensile strength. Here, two continuous devices, fluid-energy mill (FEM) and conical mill (Comil), are compared with LabRAM, a batch device used in previous work, for nano-silica dry coating of microcrystalline cellulose (MCC) excipients, 20 and 30 µm. Coated MCCs from all three devices had higher bulk densities and flow function coefficients (FFCs) compared with Avicel PH-102. Silica coating quality was best with LabRAM, but also good with FEM and Comil, although Comil was less effective for the finer MCC. However, the better coating quality of LabRAM had a downside of having poorer compaction properties. The most surprising outcome was that multi-component blends of 17 wt% coated MCC with 60 wt % Ibuprofen 50 had higher bulk density, higher or similar flowability, higher tablet tensile strength, and comparable Ibuprofen dissolution from tablets, compared to those with Prosolv 50, a silicified excipient. The FEM dry coated MCC blends, having only 0.17 wt% silica, performed the best, having desirable bulk density, FFC, and tensile strength that could facilitate high-speed direct compression tableting. In summary, considering that achieving best coating quality need not be the primary objective, FEM may be the best option for producing desired sized dry coated fine excipients.


Subject(s)
Cellulose , Excipients , Drug Compounding , Particle Size , Powders , Tablets , Tensile Strength
17.
Pharmaceuticals (Basel) ; 12(3)2019 Jul 16.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31315263

ABSTRACT

Hydrophobic drug nanocrystals (NCs) manufactured by particle engineering have been extensively investigated for enhanced oral bioavailability and therapeutic effectiveness. However, there are significant drawbacks, including fast dissolution of the nanocrystals in the gastric environment, leading to physicochemical instability. To solves this issue, we developed an innovative technique that involves the encapsulation of nanocrystals in composite spherical microparticles (NCSMs). Fenofibrate (FNB) NCs (FNB-NCs) manufactured by a wet stirred media milling (WSMM) technique and an ionotropic crosslinking method were used for FNB-NC encapsulation within gastroresistant NCSMs. Various solid-state methods were used for characterizing NCSMs. The pH-sensitive NCSMs showed a site-specific release pattern at alkaline pH and nearly 0% release at low pH (gastric environment). This phenomenon was confirmed by a real-time in situ UV-imaging system known as the surface dissolution imager (SDI), which was used to monitor drug release events by measuring the color intensity and concentration gradient formation. All these results proved that our NCSM approach is an innovative idea in oral drug delivery systems, as it resolves significant challenges in the intestine-specific release of hydrophobic drugs while avoiding fast dissolution or burst release.

18.
Eur J Pharm Biopharm ; 137: 164-174, 2019 Apr.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30826474

ABSTRACT

Drying is an important unit operation in the manufacturing of polymer strip films as it affects various film quality attributes. Optimal design and control of convective drying process require models that capture the impact of critical process parameters such as air temperature and velocity on the temporal evolution of film thickness and moisture. Here, a detailed transport model was presented to capture moisture diffusion, heat transfer and moving boundary in convective drying of polymer strip films loaded with griseofulvin (GF), a poorly water-soluble drug. It incorporates a solvent diffusivity model based on free-volume theory. Experimentally, film precursor suspensions were prepared by mixing silica-coated and micronized GF powder with an aqueous solution of hydroxypropyl methylcellulose (HPMC)-glycerin. Films were cast and moisture-time variation during drying was measured. The transport model, whose diffusivity parameters were estimated using drying data at a reference condition, was validated at different drying conditions and wet film thicknesses. It delineates underlying mechanisms of drying kinetics and demarcates a smooth transition from constant-rate to falling-rate period. Overall, our results suggest that the transport model is capable of predicting the temporal evolution of moisture and final film thickness at different drying air velocities and temperatures with reasonable accuracy.


Subject(s)
Chemistry, Pharmaceutical/methods , Griseofulvin/administration & dosage , Polymers/chemistry , Technology, Pharmaceutical/methods , Desiccation/methods , Diffusion , Drug Compounding/methods , Glycerol/chemistry , Griseofulvin/chemistry , Hypromellose Derivatives/chemistry , Silicon Dioxide/chemistry , Solubility , Solvents/chemistry , Temperature , Water/chemistry
19.
Int J Pharm ; 557: 354-365, 2019 Feb 25.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30597273

ABSTRACT

Direct compaction tableting, a desired manufacturing option, is infeasible for blends containing fine cohesive poorly-compactable APIs at higher drug loadings. In this study, the feasibility of using fine, dry coated excipients is investigated instead of dry coating of the APIs, as was done previously. Avicel PH-105 (20.1 µm) dry coated with 1 wt% hydrophilic silica A200 as an engineered excipient was blended with fine (11.3 µm) or semi-fine (30.2 µm) Acetaminophen, or Ibuprofen 50 (55.4 µm) in binary blends at low, medium and high drug loadings (10%, 30%, 60%). The blend uniformity, bulk density, flowability, as well as tablet properties such as friability, weight variation and strength demonstrate overall better performance compared to blends with Avicel PH-105, Prosolv 50 or Prosolv 90 as the excipient. These results along with processability maps of bulk density vs. FFC and tablet tensile strength vs. FFC indicate dry coated Avicel PH-105 could enable direct compaction for IBU50 and cAPAP at all drug loadings, and up to 30% drug loading for mAPAP. In contrast, Prosolv 90 failed for IBU50 at 60% drug loading, and for mAPAP at all drug loadings. Prosolv 50 could only enable direct compaction for IBU50 at all drug loadings. These unexpected outcomes suggest that for direct compaction of very fine, cohesive APIs at higher drug loadings, surface modified fine excipients perform better. A surprising outcome is the improvement in tablet strength for blends with dry coated Avicel PH-105 compared to uncoated Avicel PH-105 at higher drug loading, especially considering parts I and II showed that silica dry coating decreases the placebo tablet tensile strength.


Subject(s)
Acetaminophen/chemistry , Cellulose/chemistry , Excipients/chemistry , Ibuprofen/chemistry , Silicon Dioxide/chemistry , Drug Compounding , Particle Size , Rheology , Tablets , Tensile Strength
20.
AAPS PharmSciTech ; 20(2): 40, 2019 Jan 04.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30610396

ABSTRACT

Polymer strip film is a promising dosage form for oral delivery of poorly water-soluble drugs. Drying is an important step in the production of polymer strip films with significant effects on critical quality attributes (CQAs). In this study, a custom-made batch drying setup was used to study convective drying kinetics of wet polymer strip films loaded with dry-coated micronized griseofulvin (GF) at various drying conditions. A rate-based semi-empirical model was formulated and parameters were estimated by integral method of analysis using a coupled optimizer-ordinary differential equation solver. Despite its simplicity with three parameters, the model could fit the experimental data very well for all drying conditions, which enabled us to examine the effects of air velocity, temperature, and initial wet film thickness on drying kinetics quantitatively. The modeling results clearly delineate a drying mechanism with constant-rate and falling-rate periods. One set of kinetic parameter estimates reasonably predicted the drying kinetics for two different wet film thicknesses in the selected process conditions, which demonstrates the predictive capability of the model. After reporting the limitations of the semi-empirical model, upon future modification and refinement, its potential use in drying process development and process control was highlighted.


Subject(s)
Desiccation/methods , Drug Delivery Systems , Polymers/chemistry , Griseofulvin/chemistry , Kinetics , Solubility , Temperature
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