Combined Effect of the Preparation Method and Compression on the Physical Stability and Dissolution Behavior of Melt-Quenched Amorphous Celecoxib.
Mol Pharm
; 18(3): 1408-1418, 2021 03 01.
Article
in En
| MEDLINE
| ID: mdl-33586988
In an earlier investigation, amorphous celecoxib was shown to be sensitive to compression-induced destabilization. This was established by evaluating the physical stability of uncompressed/compressed phases in the supercooled state (BeÌ
rzins . Mol. Pharmaceutics, 2019, 16(8), 3678-3686). In this study, we investigated the ramifications of compression-induced destabilization in the glassy state as well as the impact of compression on the dissolution behavior. Slow and fast melt-quenched celecoxib disks were compressed with a range of compression pressures (125-500 MPa) and dwell times (0-60 s). These were then monitored for crystallization using low-frequency Raman spectroscopy when kept under dry (â¼20 °C; <5% RH) and humid (â¼20 °C; 97% RH) storage conditions. Faster crystallization was observed from the samples, which were compressed using more severe compression parameters. Furthermore, crystallization was also affected by the cooling rate used to form the amorphous phases; slow melt-quenched samples exhibited higher sensitivity to compression-induced destabilization. The behavior of the melt-quench disks, subjected to different compression conditions, was continuously monitored during dissolution using low-frequency Raman and UV/vis for the solid-state form and dissolution properties, respectively. Surprisingly the compressed samples exhibited higher apparent dissolution (i.e., higher area under the dissolution curve and initial celecoxib concentration in solution) than the uncompressed samples; however, this is attributed to biaxial fracturing throughout the compressed compacts yielding a greater effective surface area. Differences between the slow and fast melt quenched samples showed some trends similar to those observed for their storage stability.
Key words
Full text:
1
Collection:
01-internacional
Database:
MEDLINE
Main subject:
Celecoxib
Language:
En
Journal:
Mol Pharm
Journal subject:
BIOLOGIA MOLECULAR
/
FARMACIA
/
FARMACOLOGIA
Year:
2021
Document type:
Article
Affiliation country:
New Zealand
Country of publication:
United States