Literature DB >> 19442711

Comparison of solid dispersions produced by supercritical antisolvent and spray-freezing technologies.

Elisabeth Badens1, Viktor Majerik, Géza Horváth, László Szokonya, Nathalie Bosc, Eric Teillaud, Gérard Charbit.   

Abstract

Oxeglitazar is a new orally administered poorly water soluble active substance used in the treatment of type II diabetes. The objective of this work was to improve its dissolution kinetics using supercritical antisolvent (SAS) and spray-freezing (SF) techniques. Oxeglitazar was formulated with various excipients, including: Poloxamer 188 and 407, polyethylene glycol (PEG) 8000 and polyvinylpyrrolidone (PVP) K17 in a 1:1 weight ratio. In the SAS technology, pharmaceutical ingredients were dissolved in an appropriate solvent, and the feed solution was dispersed through a capillary nozzle in supercritical CO(2) (SC CO(2)). Dichloromethane (DCM), chloroform (CHCl(3)), and a binary co-solvent system of chloroform-ethanol (EtOH/CHCl(3) 50:50, v/v%) were tested. In the SF process, tert-butanol (tBuOH) was used as solvent. The feed solution was injected into liquid nitrogen through a capillary nozzle located above the surface of the boiling nitrogen. Frozen particles were collected and freeze-dried for 30 h. Formulations were compared in terms of particle morphology, particle size, flow properties, crystallinity, polymorphic purity, residual solvent content, precipitation yield, drug content, specific surface area and dissolution kinetics. SAS and SF processed formulations exhibited enhanced dissolution rates. Within 5 min, the amount of dissolved drug varied from 31.6 to 64.3% for SAS and from 77.9 to 96.9% for freeze-dried formulations while only 30.5% was dissolved from raw drug. Apart from oxeglitazar/PVP K17, SAS prepared solid dispersions were characterized by high crystallinity and acicular shape. Freeze-dried formulations consisted of porous spherical particles with high amorphous content (94.2-100%).

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Year:  2009        PMID: 19442711     DOI: 10.1016/j.ijpharm.2009.04.047

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Int J Pharm        ISSN: 0378-5173            Impact factor:   5.875


  6 in total

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2.  Enhanced oral bioavailability of fenofibrate using polymeric nanoparticulated systems: physicochemical characterization and in vivo investigation.

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Journal:  Adv Biomed Res       Date:  2018-09-21

5.  Applying Supercritical Fluid Technology to Prepare Ibuprofen Solid Dispersions with Improved Oral Bioavailability.

Authors:  Fei Han; Wei Zhang; Ying Wang; Ziyue Xi; Lu Chen; Sanming Li; Lu Xu
Journal:  Pharmaceutics       Date:  2019-02-03       Impact factor: 6.321

6.  Optimizing Solvent Selection and Processing Conditions to Generate High Bulk-Density, Co-Precipitated Amorphous Dispersions of Posaconazole.

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  6 in total

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