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Journal ArticleDOI

Characterization of glass solutions of poorly water-soluble drugs produced by melt extrusion with hydrophilic amorphous polymers.

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TLDR
Depending on the temperature used, melt extrusion produced amorphous glass solutions, with markedly improved dissolution rates compared with crystalline drug, and a significant physicochemical interaction between drug and polymer was found for all extrudates.
Abstract
Indomethacin, lacidipine, nifedipine and tolbutamide are poorly soluble in water and may show dissolution-related low oral bioavailability. This study describes the formulation and characterization of these drugs as glass solutions with the amorphous polymers polyvinylpyrrolidone (PVP) and polyvinylpyrrolidone-co-vinyl acetate by melt extrusion. The extrudates were compared with physical mixtures of drug and polymer. X-ray powder diffraction, thermal analysis, infrared spectroscopy, scanning electron microscopy, HPLC, moisture analysis and dissolution were used to examine the physicochemical properties and chemical stability of the glass solutions prepared by melt extrusion at a 1:1 drug/polymer ratio. Depending on the temperature used, melt extrusion produced amorphous glass solutions, with markedly improved dissolution rates compared with crystalline drug. A significant physico-chemical interaction between drug and polymer was found for all extrudates. This interaction was caused by hydrogen bonding (H-bonding) between the carbonyl group of the pyrrole ring of the polymer and a H-donor group of the drug. Indomethacin also showed evidence of H-bonding when physical mixtures of amorphous drug and PVP were prepared. After storage of the extrudates for 4-8 weeks at 25 degrees C/75% relative humidity (RH) only indomethacin/polymer (1:1) extrudate remained totally amorphous. All extrudates remained amorphous when stored at 25 degrees C/< 10% RH. Differences in the physical stability of drug/polymer extrudates may be due to differences in H-bonding between the components.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Crystal engineering of active pharmaceutical ingredients to improve solubility and dissolution rates.

TL;DR: The concept and theory of crystal engineering is covered and the potential benefits, disadvantages and methods of preparation of co-crystals, metastable polymorphs, high-energy amorphous forms and ultrafine particles are discussed.
Journal ArticleDOI

The mechanisms of drug release from solid dispersions in water-soluble polymers.

TL;DR: A model is proposed whereby the release behaviour from the dispersions may be understood in terms of the dissolution or otherwise of the drug into the concentrated aqueous polymer layer adjacent to the solid surface, including a derivation of an expression to describe the release of intact particles from the dispersed particles.
Journal ArticleDOI

Melt extrusion: from process to drug delivery technology

TL;DR: Improved bioavailability was achieved again demonstrating the value of the technology as a drug delivery tool, with particular advantages over solvent processes like co-precipitation.
Journal ArticleDOI

Pharmaceutical Applications of Hot-Melt Extrusion: Part I

TL;DR: The pharmaceutical applications of hot-melt extrusion, including equipment, principles of operation, and process technology, are reviewed and the physicochemical properties of the resultant dosage forms are described.
Journal ArticleDOI

Polymeric Amorphous Solid Dispersions: A Review of Amorphization, Crystallization, Stabilization, Solid-State Characterization, and Aqueous Solubilization of Biopharmaceutical Classification System Class II Drugs

TL;DR: This review attempts to address the critical molecular and thermodynamic aspects governing the physicochemical properties of amorphous solid dispersion systems and potential advantage of polymers as inert, hydrophilic, pharmaceutical carrier matrices.
References
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Book

Handbook of Pharmaceutical Excipients

TL;DR: The Handbook of Pharmaceutical Excipients is internationally recognised as the authoritative source of information on pharmaceutical excipients giving a comprehensive guide to uses, properties and safety.
Journal ArticleDOI

Characteristics and Significance of the Amorphous State in Pharmaceutical Systems

TL;DR: The amorphous state is critical in determining the solid-state physical and chemical properties of many pharmaceutical dosage forms and some of the most common methods that can be used to measure them are described.
Journal ArticleDOI

Solid dispersion of poorly water‐soluble drugs: Early promises, subsequent problems, and recent breakthroughs

TL;DR: Commercial use of solid dispersion systems during the past four decades has been very limited, primarily because of manufacturing difficulties and stability problems, but this has been changing in recent years because of the availability of surface-active and self-emulsifying carriers and the development of technologies to encapsulate solid dispersions directly into hard gelatin capsules as melts.
Journal ArticleDOI

Spectroscopic characterization of interactions between PVP and indomethacin in amorphous molecular dispersions.

TL;DR: A comparison of the carbonyl stretching region of γ indomethacin, known to form carboxylic acid dimers, with that of amorphous indometHacin indicated that the amorphously phase exists predominantly as dimers.
Journal ArticleDOI

The relationship between the glass transition temperature and the water content of amorphous pharmaceutical solids.

TL;DR: It was found that there is a rapid initial reduction in the glass transition temperature from the dry state as water is absorbed, followed by a gradual leveling off of the response at higher water contents, indicating that water acts as a plasticizer in a way similar to that of other small molecules and not through any specific or stoichiometric interaction process(es).
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