Formulation Intervention to Overcome Decreased Kinetic Solubility of a Low Tg Amorphous Drug
This technical note investigated the loss of dissolution rate during accelerated stability studies with a dry blend capsule formulation containing an amorphous salt of drug NVS-1 ( T g 76°C). After 6 m at 40°C/75%RH, dissolution of NVS-1 was ≤40% of initial value. Scanning electron microscope charac...
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Veröffentlicht in: | AAPS PharmSciTech 2023-07, Vol.24 (6), p.149-149, Article 149 |
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Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | This technical note investigated the loss of dissolution rate during accelerated stability studies with a dry blend capsule formulation containing an amorphous salt of drug NVS-1 (
T
g
76°C). After 6 m at 40°C/75%RH, dissolution of NVS-1 was ≤40% of initial value. Scanning electron microscope characterization of the undissolved capsule contents from samples stored at 50°C/75%RH for 3 weeks showed agglomeration with a distinct “melt and fuse” morphology of particles. At elevated temperature and humidity conditions, undesired sintering among the amorphous drug particles was observed. Humidity plasticizes the drug as the stability temperature (
T
) gets closer to the glass transition temperature (
T
g
) of the amorphous salt (i.e., smaller
T
g
-
T
); a decreased viscosity favors viscoplastic deformation and sintering of drug particles. When moisture is adsorbed onto agglomerated drug particles, partial dissolution of the drug forms a viscous surface layer, further reducing the rate of dissolution media penetration into the bulk solid, hence the slower dissolution rate. Formulation intervention focused on the use of L-HPC and fumed silica as disintegrant and glidant and the removal of the hygroscopic crospovidone. Reformulation improved dissolution performance at short-term accelerated stability conditions of 50°C (± 75%RH); however, sintering to a lesser extent was still observed at high humidity, impacting the dissolution rate. We infer reducing the impact of moisture at high humidity conditions in a formulation with a 34% drug load is challenging. Future formulation efforts will focus on the addition of water scavengers, reducing drug load by ~50% to physically separate drug particles by water-insoluble excipients, and optimizing disintegrant levels. |
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ISSN: | 1530-9932 1530-9932 |
DOI: | 10.1208/s12249-023-02601-z |