Hot-melt extrudability of amorphous solid dispersions of flubendazole-copovidone: An exploratory study of the effect of drug loading and the balance of adjuvants on extrudability and dissolution
[Display omitted] •Flubendazole amorphous solid dispersions were hot-melted extruded.•Copovidone, magnesium stearate and hydroxypropylcelullose were evaluated.•Mixtures statiscally designed were extruded in a twin-screw extruder.•Flubendazole:copovidone was highly extrudable, except when drug load w...
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Veröffentlicht in: | International journal of pharmaceutics 2022-02, Vol.614, p.121456-121456, Article 121456 |
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Sprache: | eng |
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•Flubendazole amorphous solid dispersions were hot-melted extruded.•Copovidone, magnesium stearate and hydroxypropylcelullose were evaluated.•Mixtures statiscally designed were extruded in a twin-screw extruder.•Flubendazole:copovidone was highly extrudable, except when drug load was >40%.•Extruded materials had improved dissolution results compared with pure drug.
The FDA-approved anthelmintic flubendazole has shown potential to be repositioned to treat cancer and dry macular degeneration; however, its poor water solubility limits its use. Amorphous solid dispersions may overcome this challenge, but the balance of excipients may impact the preparation method and drug release. The purpose of this study was to evaluate the influence of adjuvants and drug loading on the development of an amorphous solid dispersion of flubendazole-copovidone by hot-melt extrusion. The drug, copovidone, and adjuvants (magnesium stearate and hydroxypropyl cellulose) mixtures were statistically designed, and the process was performed in a twin-screw extruder. The study showed that flubendazole and copovidone mixtures were highly extrudable, except when drug loading was high (>40%). Furthermore, magnesium stearate positively impacted the extrusion and was more effective than hydroxypropyl cellulose. The extruded materials were evaluated by modulated differential scanning calorimetry and X-ray powder diffraction, obtaining positive amorphization and physical stability results. Pair distribution function analysis indicated the presence of drug-rich domains with medium-range order structure and no evidence of polymer-drug interaction. All extrudates presented faster dissolution (HCl, pH 1.2) than pure flubendazole, and both adjuvants had a notable influence on the dissolution rate. In conclusion, hot-melt extrusion may be a viable option to obtain stable flubendazole:copovidone amorphous dispersions. |
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ISSN: | 0378-5173 1873-3476 |
DOI: | 10.1016/j.ijpharm.2022.121456 |