首页|Assessment of the amorphous solid dispersion erosion behavior following a novel small-scale predictive approach

Assessment of the amorphous solid dispersion erosion behavior following a novel small-scale predictive approach

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In general, the erosion rate of copovidone-based amorphous solid dispersions (ASDs) in contact with water diminishes with increasing drug load, causing poor drug release from the final drug product. A new easy-to-use tool with low materialand time-consumption, the microscopic erosion time test (METT), was established to allow prediction of the API-specific drug load threshold between an eroding and a non-eroding ASD. This API-specific drug load value is further described as the drug load dispersibility limit (DDL) and is the highest drug load at which an eroding ASD was still observed. A minor increase of 2.5% in drug load above the DDL already led to a non-eroding ASD and it was subsequently connected to the drug load-associated drop in API in vitro dissolution of ASD tablets and an impeded tablet disintegration. In total, 19 APIs in copovidone-based ASDs were characterized via the METT while a subset of these was investigated in more detail, namely indomethacin, celecoxib, dipyridamole, fenofibrate, naproxen and ritonavir. Furthermore, indomethacinand celecoxib-containing ASDs with various drug loads were prepared and characterized to link the METT outcome with ASD tablet in vitro dissolution and disintegration performance.

SolubilityDisintegrationAmorphous solid dispersionErosionFormulation developmentDissolutionDrug loadPoorly soluble compound

Bochmann, Esther S.、Steidel, Andreas、Rosenblatt, Karin M.、Gessner, David、Liepold, Bernd

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AbbVie Deutschland GmbH & Co KG, D-67061 Ludwigshafen, Germany

2021

European journal of pharmaceutical sciences

European journal of pharmaceutical sciences

ISTP
ISSN:0928-0987
年,卷(期):2021.158
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