| Literature DB >> 27213434 |
Meng Li1, Mohammad Azad2, Rajesh Davé3, Ecevit Bilgili4.
Abstract
Preparation of drug nanoparticles via wet media milling (nanomilling) is a very versatile drug delivery platform and is suitable for oral, injectable, inhalable, and buccal applications. Wet media milling followed by various drying processes has become a well-established and proven formulation approach especially for bioavailability enhancement of poorly water-soluble drugs. It has several advantages such as organic solvent-free processing, tunable and relatively high drug loading, and applicability to a multitude of poorly water-soluble drugs. Although the physical stability of the wet-milled suspensions (nanosuspensions) has attracted a lot of attention, fundamental understanding of the process has been lacking until recently. The objective of this review paper is to present fundamental insights from available published literature while summarizing the recent advances and highlighting the gap areas that have not received adequate attention. First, stabilization by conventionally used polymers/surfactants and novel stabilizers is reviewed. Then, a fundamental understanding of the process parameters, with a focus on wet stirred media milling, is revealed based on microhydrodynamic models. This review is expected to bring a holistic formulation-process perspective to the nanomilling process and pave the way for robust process development scale-up. Finally, challenges are indicated with a view to shedding light on future opportunities.Entities:
Keywords: drug nanoparticles; process modeling; process parameters; stabilization; wet stirred media milling
Year: 2016 PMID: 27213434 PMCID: PMC4932480 DOI: 10.3390/pharmaceutics8020017
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Pharmaceutics ISSN: 1999-4923 Impact factor: 6.321
Figure 1The number of published scientific papers in the period from 2006 to 2015 which reported the use of wet milling for poorly soluble drugs (source: Scopus database, key words: “poorly soluble drug” or “BCS Class II” or “insoluble drug” or “slightly soluble drug” or “drug nanoparticle” or “drug nanocrystal” and “wet milling”).
Figure 2Schematic of possible mechanisms operating during the wet media milling of drugs.
Figure 3Schematic of a wet stirred media mill with recirculation mode of operation [45] (reprinted with permission. Copyright Elsevier 2014).
Figure 4Schematic of physical stabilization mechanisms in drug nanosuspensions: (a) steric stabilization imparted by nonionic polymers or nonionic surfactants; (b) electrostatic stabilization imparted by anionic surfactants; and (c) electrosteric stabilization imparted by both nonionic polymers and anionic surfactants.
List of publications on the stabilization of drug nanosuspensions produced via wet media milling between 2006 and 2015.
| References (Year) | Drug | Drug Concentration (%) a | Stabilizer(s) b | Stabilizer Concentration (%) a | Reported Smallest Median or Mean Particle Size after Milling (nm) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Bitterlich | Naproxen | 5 | Poloxamer-188, PVP-K 30, PVA-Mowiol 3-85, Mowiol 4-88, PVP-VA64, HPC-LF, Polysorbate-80, TPGS, SDS, HPMC | 0.1–15 | ~150 |
| Dong | SNX-2112 | 1 | Poloxamer-188, Polysorbate-80 | 0.01–1 | 203 |
| Kumar | Danazol | 1 | PVP-K 30, 40, PVA, HPMC-E3, E5, E15, Methocel-A15, SDS, TPGS, Poloxamer-188, 407, Dowfax-2A1, HPC | 0.2 | 168 |
| Afolabi | Griseofulvin | 5–30 c | HPC-SL | 2.5 | 132 |
| SDS | 0.5 | ||||
| Bhakay | Griseofulvin, Azodicarbonamide | 10 c | HPC-SL, SDS | 0–2.5 | 160 |
| Bitterlich | Cinnarizine, Fenofibrate | 10 | DOSS | 0.25 | 276 |
| SDS | 0.1 | ||||
| Poloxamer-188, PVP-K30, PVP-VA64, PVA-Mowiol 3–85, Polysorbate-80, HPMC, Vit-E TPGS | 2.5 | ||||
| Komasaka | Cilostazol, Curucumin, Furosemide, Naproxen, Phenytoin, Nifedipine, Danazol, Spironolactone, Cinnarizine, Piroxicam, Indomethacin | 10, 20 | HPMC of different molecular weight, TC-5E, MC-400, Metolose, PVP-K17, Polysorbate-80, SDS, Cremophor-RH40, Poloxamer-188, Vit-E TPGS | 0.5 | ~120 |
| Leng | Paliperidone palmitate | 15 | Polysorbate-80 | NM f | 492 (±8) |
| Mahesh | Glipizide | 1.6 | SDS, Poloxamer-188, 407, Polysorbate-80 | 2.5–7.5 d | NM f |
| PVP-K30, HPMC | 2.5–5 d | ||||
| Shah | Glibenclamide | 0.5 | PVP-S630 D, Poloxamer-188, Polysorbate-80, HPMC, HPC, HEC, SDS | 0.25 | 329 |
| Sarnes | Itraconazole | 15 | Poloxamer-407 | 9–12 | 315 (±5) |
| Yuminoki | Griseofulvin, Hydrochlorothiazide, Tolbutamide, Acyclovir, Indomethacin, Diprydamole, Naproxen, Piroxicam, Phenytoin | 1–20 | HPC, PVP, POVA, PVA | 1–10 | 120 (±2) |
| Bhakay | Griseofulvin, Phenylbutazone | 10 c | HPC-SL, SDS | 0–2.5 | 145 |
| Mannitol | 10 | ||||
| Cerdeira | Miconazole, Itraconazole | 5–20 | SDS | 0–0.2 | 136 |
| HPC-LF | 1.25–5 | ||||
| HPMC-E15, Poloxamer-188, 407 | 5 | ||||
| George and Ghosh (2013) [ | Naproxen, compound A, B, C, D and E from Novartis | 5 | Vit-E TPGS, Poloxamer-407, SDS, DOSS | 1 | <500 |
| HPMC | 2.5 | ||||
| Knieke | Fenofibrate | 2.5 | HPMC-E3 | 5–50 e | 151 |
| SDS | 5–20 e | ||||
| Monteiro | Griseofulvin, Naproxen | 10 c | HPC-SL | 2.5 | 138 |
| SDS | 0.0825, 0.5 | ||||
| Niwa and Danjo (2013) [ | Phenytoin | 8 | PVP-K30 | 0.25–16 | 168 |
| SDS | 0.1 | ||||
| Ghosh | NVS-102 | 2, 5 | HPMC | 1 | 277 |
| Vit-E TPGS | 0.5–5 | ||||
| Tanaka | Probucol | 1 | Gelucire-44/14, Gelucire-50/13, Vit-E TPGS, Poloxamer-188, 338 | 1 | 77 |
| Sievens-Figueroa | Naproxen, Fenofibrate, Griseofulvin | 10c | HPMC-E15LV | 2.5 c | 144 |
| SDS | 0.075, 0.5c | ||||
| Ali | Hydrocortisone | 2 | PVP, Polysorbate-80 | 0.2 | 300 |
| HPMC | 0.5 | ||||
| Bhakay | Itraconazole, Fenofibrate, Griseofulvin, Ibuprofen, Azodicarbonamide, Sulfamethoxazole | 2c | SA, SDS, HPMC, Polysorbate-80 | 0.1 | 740 |
| HPMC-E15 LV | 0.2 | ||||
| Cerdeira | Miconazole, Itraconazole, Etravirine | 20 | HPC-LF | 5 | 129 |
| SDS | 0–0.2 | ||||
| Chin | Carbofuran | 40.6, 44 | Atlox-4913 | 4–7 | 29 |
| PVP-K30 | 1–3 | ||||
| Miglyol-812 | 1–3 | ||||
| Ghosh | Compound NVS-102 | 5 | Vit-E TPGS | 3, 5 | 230.2 |
| SDS, HPMC, PVP-K30 | 1 | ||||
| Poloxamer-188, 407 | 2 | ||||
| Liu | Indomethacin, Itraconazole | 40 | Polysorbate-80, PEG-6000, Poloxamer-188, 407 | 10–80 e | 345 |
| Cerdeira | Miconazole | 5–25 | HPC-LF | 1.25–6.25 | 140 |
| HPC-EF, PVP-30, Poloxamer-188, HPMC-E15 | 1.25, 2.5 | ||||
| SDS | 0.0125, 0.05, 0.2 | ||||
| DOSS (SD) | 0.1, 5 | ||||
| BKC | 0.1 | ||||
| Juhnke | Naproxen | 2 | HPC-LF | 0.5 | 151 |
| Compounds A and B, from Novartis | |||||
| Patel | Famotidine | 0.4 | HPMC-K15M, PVP-K30, Polysorbate-80, Poloxamer-188, 407 | 0.4, 0.8 | 244.6 |
| Baert | Rilpivirine (TMC278) | 12.5 | Poloxamer-338 | 3.125 | 200 |
| Vit-E TPGS | 3.125 | ||||
| Fakes | HIV-attachment inhibitor: BMS-488043 | 10 | HPC-SL | 1.25, 2.1 | 120 |
| SDS, DOSS | 0.1 | ||||
| Tanaka | Omeprazole, Albendazole, Danazol | 1 | Polysorbate-80, Poloxamer-188, 407 | 0.05–5 | 102 |
| Van Eerdenbrugh | Loviride, Itraconazole, Cinnarizine, Griseofulvin, Indomethacin, Mebendazole, Naproxen, Phenylbutazone, Phenytoin | 20 | PVP-K30, K90, PVA-PEG (K-IR), Poloxamer-188, Vit-E TPGS, PVA, Polysorbate-80 | 10–100 | >1000 |
| HPMC-E15, HEC, HPC, MC, NaCMC, NaAlg | 1–10 | ||||
| Ain-Ai and Gupta (2008) [ | Naproxen | 10, 30 | HPC | 1–4 | 417 |
| AH | 0–1.2 | ||||
| Choi | Itraconazole | 8 | HPC of different molecular weights | 1.33 | 110 |
| Deng | Compound A | 15 | Plasdone S-630 | 3.5, 4.1 | 82 |
| SD | 0.25, 0.295 | ||||
| Lee | Ibuprofen, Glimepiride, Digitoxin, Naproxen, Biphenyl dimethyl dicarboxylate, Paclitaxel, Lipoic acid, Predinisolone acetate, Nifedipin, Hydrocortihydrocortisone acetate, Itraconazole | 8 | HPC, PVP, PEG , Poloxamer-188, 407 | 1.33 | 119 (±37) |
| SDS, Benzethonium chloride | 1 | ||||
| Van Eerdenbrugh | Loviride, Itraconazole, Cinnarizine, Griseofulvin, Indomethacin, Mebendazole, Naproxen, Phenylbutazone, Phenytoin | 20c | Vit-E TPGS | 25 e | 156 |
| Dai | Poorly water soluble compound/carrageenan complex | 5 | Poloxamer-407 | 0.75 | 300 |
| Tyloxapol, HPMC-2910, HPC-SL | 1.5, 2 | ||||
| PVP-K30 | 0.75, 2 | ||||
| Plasdone-S630 | 1.31, 2 | ||||
| DOSS | 0.15 | ||||
| Sepassi | Nabumetone, Halofantrine | 20 | HPMC-E3LV, E4M, PVP-K12, K30, K90 | 0.63–6.25 | 650 |
| Van Eerdenbrugh | Loviride | 20 | Polysorbate-80, Poloxamer-188 | 50 e | 264 (±14) |
| Jinno | Cilostazol | 0.25 | HPC | 16.5 | 220 |
| DOSS | 0.8 |
a With respect to suspension, w/v or w/w; b Names of the stabilizers are abbreviated: AH: Arginine hydrochloride; Atlox 4913: Poly(methyl methacrylate) poly(ethylene glycol) graft copolymer; BKC: Benzalkonium chloride; DOSS (SD): Dioctyl sulfosuccinate sodium salt (sodium docusate); HEC: Hydroxyethylcellulose; HPC: Hydroxypropyl cellulose; HPMC: Hydroxypropylmethyl cellulose; MC: Methylcellulose; Miglyol 812: a 60/40 (w/w) mixture of C8 and C10 triglycerides; NaAlg: Alginic acid sodium salt; NaCMC: Carboxymethylcellulose sodium salt; PEG: Polyethylene glycol; Plasdone S-630: Copoviodone, Vinyl pyrrolidone/vinyl acetate copolymer; PVA: Polyvinyl alcohol; PVA-PEG: Polyvinyl alcohol polyethylene glycol graft copolymer; PVP: Polyvinylpyrrolidone; SDS: Sodium dodecyl sulfate; SA: Sodium alginate; Vit-E TPGS: d-alpha tocopheryl polyethylene glycol 1000 succinate; POVA: PVA copolymer with grafted poly acrylic acid and poly methyl methacrylate (PMMA) groups; c with respect to deionized water; d stabilizer:drug; e with respect to drug weight; f not mentioned.
Summary of the process-equipment parameters investigated in wet media milling literature from 2008 to 2015.
| References (Year) | Mill Type | Stirrer/Circumference Speed (rpm) | Suspension Flow Rate (mL/min) | Milling Time (h) | Bead Type a | Nominal or Median Bead Size (µm) | Bead Boading (%) b | Drug Concentration (%) c |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Bitterlich | Planetary ball mill | 400 | NM f | 4 | Al2O3 | 100 | 50 | 5 |
| Al2O3 | 300 | |||||||
| ZrO2 | 100 | |||||||
| ZrO2 | 200 | |||||||
| ZrO2 | 300 | |||||||
| ZrO2 | 500 | |||||||
| Li | Vibratory media mill | 40%–90% d | NM f | 1.6 | ZrO2 | 50–1500 | 30–70 | 10 |
| Li | Wet stirred media mill | 11.7–14.7 e | 126–343 | 2–6 | ZrO2 | 50–800 | 62.5–93.75 | 10 |
| Afolabi | Wet stirred media mill | 5.86–14.7 e | 126 | 1.6 | ZrO2 | 430 | 17.5–93.75 | 5–30 |
| Kumar and Burgess (2014) [ | Wet stirred media mill | 2000–3400 | NM f | 1–4 | ZrO2 | NM f | NM f | 1 |
| Shah | Wet media mill | 400–1100 | NM f | 3–11 | ZrO2 | 100–1000 | 50 f | 0.5 |
| Bitterlich | Planetary ball mill | 400 | NM f | 4 | ZrO2 | 325 | 50 | 10 g |
| Wet stirred media mill | 9 e | NM f | 6–24 | Al2O3 (irregular) | 185–320 | 70 h | ||
| Al2O3 (spherical) | 311 | |||||||
| ZrO2 | 185–475 | |||||||
| Monteiro | Wet stirred media mill | 13.2 e | 55–110 | ~1 | ZrO2 | 430 | 62.5 | 10 |
| Ghosh | Planetary mill | 150–400 | NM f | 4 | ZrO2 | 100–500 | NM f | 2–5 |
| Wet stirred media mill | 2500 | NM f | 1–4 | ZrO2 | 100–500 | NM f | ||
| Juhnke | Wet stirred media mill | 6–12 e | NM f | NM f | ZrO2 | 100–500 | 80 | 10 g |
| Tanaka | Wet stirred media mill | 8–12 e | NM f | NM f | ZrO2 | 15–50 | 500 i | 1 |
| Bhakay | Wet stirred media mill | 2.65 e | NM f | 0.5–1.3 | Crosslinked polystyrene | 200–350 | 50 | 2 |
| Attritor mode | 2.65–4.97 e | NM f | 1.3 | Zirconia rings | NM f | |||
| Cerdeira | High energy media mill | 2400–3600 | 97–183 j | 0.25–1 | ZrO2 | 400–800 | 81–85 | 20 g |
| Chin | High energy intensive ball mill | 3000 | NM f | 2 | ZrO2 | 100–800 | NM f | 40.6–44 g |
| Singh | Wet stirred media mill | 2500–3400 | 100 | 3–6.5 | ZrO2 | 200 | NM f | 4 |
| Hennart | Wet stirred media mill | 2000–6000 | NM f | 3 | ZrO2 | 300–800 | 80 | NM f |
| Juhnke | Planetary mill | 400 | NM f | 0.25–2 | ZrO2 | 200 | 60 | 2 g |
| Wet stirred media mill | 10 e | NM f | 8 | Crosslinked polystyrene | 360–500 | |||
| 6 e | 8 | ZrO2 | 100 | |||||
| Singare | Wet stirred media mill | 2500–3400 | 100 | 3–6 | ZrO2 | 200 | NM f | 6.4 |
| Deng | NanoMill-01 Systems milling apparatus | 1800–4400 | NM f | 0.67–1 | Cross-linked polystyrene | 500 | NM f | 15 g |
a ZrO2: yttrium stabilized zirconium dioxide bead, Al2O3: aluminum oxide bead; b filling volume fraction of bead bulk volume relative to the volume of the milling chamber, v/v; c with respect to deionized water; d intensity; e in m/s; f not mentioned or not applicable for the specific mill/mode of operation; g with respect to suspension, w/w; h weight of grinding media filling ratio; i in g; j in g/mL.
Figure 5Effects of the stirrer speed (u) on the time-wise variation of the characteristic sizes of griseofulvin particles during wet stirred media milling (WSMM). Drug loading: 10% w/w, bead loading: 50 mL with a volumetric concentration of 0.388, bead size: 400 µm, and flow rate: 126 mL/min. Adapted from [45] with permission. Copyright Elsevier 2014.
Figure 6Effects of the bead concentration (c) on the time-wise variation of the characteristic sizes of griseofulvin particles during wet stirred media milling (WSMM). Drug loading: 10% w/w, bead size: 400 µm, flow rate: 126 mL/min, and stirrer speed: 11.7 m/s. Adapted from [45] with permission. Copyright Elsevier 2014.
Figure 7Effects of the drug loading on the time-wise variation of the characteristic sizes of griseofulvin particles during wet stirred media milling (WSMM). Bead loading: 50 mL with a volumetric concentration of 0.388, bead size: 400 µm, flow rate: 126 mL/min, and stirrer speed: 11.7 m/s. Adapted from [45] with permission. Copyright Elsevier 2014.