Prilling of API/fatty acid suspensions : processability and characterisation
De Coninck, E. and Vanhoorne, V. and Elmahdy, A. and Boone, M. and Van Assche, G. and Markl, D. and De Geest, B. G. and De Beer, T. and Vervaet, C. (2019) Prilling of API/fatty acid suspensions : processability and characterisation. International Journal of Pharmaceutics, 572. 118756. ISSN 1873-3476 (https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ijpharm.2019.118756)
Preview |
Text.
Filename: De_Coninck_etal_IJP_2019_Prilling_of_API_fatty_acid_suspensions_processability_and_characterisation.pdf
Accepted Author Manuscript License: Download (1MB)| Preview |
Abstract
Current study evaluated the processability and characteristics of prills made of an active pharmaceutical ingredient/fatty acid (API/FA) suspension instead of previously studied API/FA solutions to enlarge the application field of prilling. Metformin hydrochloride (MET) and paracetamol (PAR) were used as model APIs while both the effect of drug load (10–40%) and FA chain length (C14–C22) were evaluated. API/FA suspensions were processable on lab-scale prilling equipment without thermal degradation, nozzle obstruction or sedimentation in function of processing time. The collected prills were spherical (AR ≥ 0.898) with a smooth surface (sphericity ≥ 0.914) and a particle size of ±2.3 mm and 2.4 mm for MET and PAR prills, respectively, independent of drug load and/or FA chain length. In vitro drug release evaluation revealed a faster drug release at higher drug load, higher API water solubility and shorter FA chain length. Solid state characterisation via XRD and Raman spectroscopy showed that API and FA crystallinity was maintained after thermal processing via prilling and during storage. Evaluation of the similarity factor indicated a stable drug release (f2 > 50) from MET and PAR prills after 6 months storage at 25 °C or 40 °C.
ORCID iDs
De Coninck, E., Vanhoorne, V., Elmahdy, A., Boone, M., Van Assche, G., Markl, D. ORCID: https://orcid.org/0000-0003-0411-733X, De Geest, B. G., De Beer, T. and Vervaet, C.;-
-
Item type: Article ID code: 71368 Dates: DateEvent15 December 2019Published21 October 2019Published Online30 September 2019AcceptedSubjects: Medicine > Therapeutics. Pharmacology Department: Faculty of Science > Strathclyde Institute of Pharmacy and Biomedical Sciences Depositing user: Pure Administrator Date deposited: 06 Feb 2020 12:15 Last modified: 24 Nov 2024 01:19 Related URLs: URI: https://strathprints.strath.ac.uk/id/eprint/71368