| Literature DB >> 28737403 |
James Mann1, Jennifer Dressman2, Karin Rosenblatt3, Lee Ashworth1, Uwe Muenster4, Kerstin Frank5, Paul Hutchins6, James Williams7, Lukas Klumpp2, Kristina Wielockx8, Philippe Berben9, Patrick Augustijns9, Rene Holm10, Michael Hofmann11, Sanjaykumar Patel12, Stefania Beato13, Krista Ojala14, Irena Tomaszewska15, Jean-Luc Bruel16, James Butler7.
Abstract
Dissolution testing with biorelevant media has become widespread in the pharmaceutical industry as a means of better understanding how drugs and formulations behave in the gastrointestinal tract. Until now, however, there have been few attempts to gauge the reproducibility of results obtained with these methods. The aim of this study was to determine the interlaboratory reproducibility of biorelevant dissolution testing, using the paddle apparatus (USP 2). Thirteen industrial and three academic laboratories participated in this study. All laboratories were provided with standard protocols for running the tests: dissolution in FaSSGF to simulate release in the stomach, dissolution in a single intestinal medium, FaSSIF, to simulate release in the small intestine, and a "transfer" (two-stage) protocol to simulate the concentration profile when conditions are changed from the gastric to the intestinal environment. The test products chosen were commercially available ibuprofen tablets and zafirlukast tablets. The biorelevant dissolution tests showed a high degree of reproducibility among the participating laboratories, even though several different batches of the commercially available medium preparation powder were used. Likewise, results were almost identicalbetween the commercial biorelevant media and those produced in-house. Comparing results to previous ring studies, including those performed with USP calibrator tablets or commercially available pharmaceutical products in a single medium, the results for the biorelevant studies were highly reproducible on an interlaboratory basis. Interlaboratory reproducibility with the two-stage test was also acceptable, although the variability was somewhat greater than with the single medium tests. Biorelevant dissolution testing is highly reproducible among laboratories and can be relied upon for cross-laboratory comparisons.Entities:
Keywords: FaSSIF; OrBiTo; biorelevant; dissolution testing; in vivo predictive testing; ring study; transfer model
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Year: 2017 PMID: 28737403 DOI: 10.1021/acs.molpharmaceut.7b00198
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Mol Pharm ISSN: 1543-8384 Impact factor: 4.939