| Literature DB >> 24589422 |
Margot Fonteyne1, Henrika Wickström2, Elisabeth Peeters3, Jurgen Vercruysse3, Henrik Ehlers4, Björn-Hendrik Peters5, Jean Paul Remon3, Chris Vervaet3, Jarkko Ketolainen5, Niklas Sandler4, Jukka Rantanen6, Kaisa Naelapää6, Thomas De Beer7.
Abstract
Continuous manufacturing gains more and more interest within the pharmaceutical industry. The International Conference of Harmonisation (ICH) states in its Q8 'Pharmaceutical Development' guideline that the manufacturer of pharmaceuticals should have an enhanced knowledge of the product performance over a range of raw material attributes, manufacturing process options and process parameters. This fits further into the Process Analytical Technology (PAT) and Quality by Design (QbD) framework. The present study evaluates the effect of variation in critical raw material properties on the critical quality attributes of granules and tablets, produced by a continuous from-powder-to-tablet wet granulation line. The granulation process parameters were kept constant to examine the differences in the end product quality caused by the variability of the raw materials properties only. Theophylline-Lactose-PVP (30-67.5-2.5%) was used as model formulation. Seven different grades of theophylline were granulated. Afterward, the obtained granules were tableted. Both the characteristics of granules and tablets were determined. The results show that differences in raw material properties both affect their processability and several critical quality attributes of the resulting granules and tablets.Entities:
Keywords: Continuous pharmaceutical manufacturing; Particle size; Raw material variability; Tableting; Theophylline; Twin screw granulation
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2014 PMID: 24589422 DOI: 10.1016/j.ejpb.2014.02.011
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Eur J Pharm Biopharm ISSN: 0939-6411 Impact factor: 5.571