| Literature DB >> 34435280 |
Mercy Okezue1, Susan Bogdanowich-Knipp2, Daniel Smith3, Matthias Zeller4, Stephen Byrn3,5, Pamela Smith5,6, Dale K Purcell7, Kari Clase8,3.
Abstract
Bedaquiline is used to treat multi-resistant tuberculosis in adults. The fumarate salt is commercially available and used in the product Sirturo. To provide open access to bedaquiline molecule once the patent on the chemical substance expires, new salts were screened. This work offers additional information on the bedaquiline system, as new salts may present better pharmacokinetic properties. The current studies focus on the attempted isolation of the acetate, benzoate, benzenesulfonate, hydrobromide, succinate, hydrochloride, tartrate, lactate, maleate, malate, and mesylate salts of bedaquiline. Potential salts were screened using a unique combination of conventional screening, and small-scale experiments supplemented by crystallographic analysis and infrared microspectroscopy. Salts were prepared on a larger scale by dissolving 1:1 ratios of the individual salt formers and bedaquiline base (30 mg, 0.055 mmol) in different solvents and allowing the solutions to evaporate or crystallize. X-ray diffraction (XRD) techniques and spectroscopic and thermal analyses were employed to characterize the salts. The benzoate and maleate salts were selected as lead candidates after reviewing preliminary characterization data. To determine the most stable forms for the leads, a polymorph screen was conducted using solvents of various polarities. These salt screens successfully generated five new salts of bedaquiline, namely, benzoate, maleate, hydrochloride, besylate, and mesylate. The existence of these salts was confirmed by powder XRD, proton NMR, and IR spectroscopies. TGA and DSC thermal analysis along with hot-stage optical microscopy were further used to characterize the salts. The polymorph screen conducted on the salts suggested the absence of additional polymorphs at 1 g scale.Entities:
Keywords: Bedaquiline; Polymorph screen; Salt screen; X-ray diffraction and Tuberculosis
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34435280 PMCID: PMC8387259 DOI: 10.1208/s12249-021-02106-7
Source DB: PubMed Journal: AAPS PharmSciTech ISSN: 1530-9932 Impact factor: 3.246
Acids (salt formers) and equivalent weights used in synthesis
| Acid (salt former) used | Acid (weight, mg) equivalent to 30 mg bedaquiline base (0.054 mmol) |
|---|---|
| Acetic acid | 3.24 |
| Benzenesulfonic acid | 8.54 |
| Benzoic acid | 6.60 |
| Hydrobromic acid aq | 4.37 |
| Hydrochloric acid aq | 1.97 |
| Lactic acid (hydroxypropanoic acid) | 4.86 |
| Maleic acid | 6.27 |
| Malic acid | 7.24 |
| Methanesulfonic acid (methylsulfonic acid) | 5.19 |
| Succinic acid (butanedionic acid) | 6.38 |
| Fumaric acid | 6.27 |
Procedures for sample preparations for salt screening
| Steps | Evaporation experiments | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| 1 | Prepared 10 mL of solution of BQ containing 30 mg/mL of each solvent | This produced volumetrics with 10 mL BQ each solvent |
| 2 | Prepared 10 mL of solution of each of 10 salt formers containing approximately 30 mg/mL | This produced volumetrics with 10 mL of each salt former in each solvent |
| 3 | Placed 1 mL of BQ solution (contains 30 mg BQ) in a scintillation vial | This produced scintillation vials with 1 mL BQ each for different solvents |
| 4 | Added stoichiometric amount of salt former solution to vials containing 1 mL of BQ | Produced vials containing BQ and 1 of 10 salt formers in different solvent |
| 5 | Allowed the vials to evaporate (fast evaporation) | Analyzed solids produced by X-ray diffraction and/or microscopy |
| 6 | Inserted pin holes in foil aluminum cap covering vial | Analyzed solids produced by X-ray diffraction and/or microscopy |
| 7 | Used water as antisolvent to crystallize salt from solution | Analyzed solids produced by X-ray diffraction and/or microscopy |
Summary of solvents used in polymorph identification screen
| Solvent | Dielectric constant @ 20 °C (a measure of solvent polarity) |
|---|---|
| Hexanes | 1.88 |
| Ethyl acetate | 6.02 |
| Tetrahydrofuran (THF) | 7.6 |
| Trifluoroethanol (TFE) | 8.55 |
| 2-Propanol | 20.18 |
| Acetone | 20.7 |
| Propyl alcohol | 21.8 |
| Ethanol | 25.3 |
| Methanol | 33.0 |
| Dimethylformamide (DMF) | 36.71 |
| Acetonitrile | 37.5 |
| Water | 80.1 |
Fig. 1.a PXRD from benzoate from acetone experiment gave a good fit when refined against the bedaquiline hydrate single crystal. b PXRD from maleic acid: bedaquiline, slow and fast evaporation in THF gave a good fit when refined against bedaquiline maleate THF single crystal.
Fig. 2.a Bedaquiline benzoate single crystal. One fully occupied and one partially occupied water molecule are present in the lattice. b Bedaquiline maleate as a 0.5 hydrate single crystal.
Melting ranges obtained for different salts from study experiments
| Salt experiment | Melting range (°C) |
|---|---|
| Bedaquiline benzoate (BABQ) from acetone | 128 ± 1 |
| Bedaquiline benzoate (BABQ) from IPA water | 134 ± 1 |
| Bedaquiline base | 174 ± 1 |
| Benzoic acid | 121 ± 1 |
| Bedaquiline fumarate | 185 ± 1 |
| BABQ from IPA polymorph screen (PS) | 133 ± 1 |
| BABQ from methanol PS | 119 ± 1 |
| BABQ from ethanol PS | 128 ± 1 |
| Bedaquiline hydrochloride salt from acetone slow and fast evaporation experiments | 163 ± 1 |
| Bedaquiline hydrochloride salt from IPA slow evaporation experiment | 163 ± 1 |
| Bedaquiline maleate from THF | 143 ± 1 |
| BABQ from propyl alcohol (PA) slurry PS | 127 ± 1 |
| BABQ from methanol slurry PS | 131 ± 1 |
| BABQ from acetone/hexane as antisolvent PS | 134 ± 1 |
| BABQ from acetone/water as antisolvent PS | 116 ± 1 |
| BABQ from PA/water as antisolvent PS | 128 ± 1 |
| BABQ from DMF heated and cooled PS | 126 ± 1 |
Fig. 3.a Endothermic maxima at 109.33 °C and 124.73 °C corresponding to solvent evaporation and melt of benzoate salt prepared from acetonitrile. b Melting endotherm maximum from bedaquiline maleate salt at142.6 °C prepared from slow evaporation from THF.
Fig. 4.TGA data from benzoate crystalline salt with 1.17% hydrate. Percent weight loss was determined at 45 °C and 150 °C, respectively
Fig. 5.a HSOM data from a bedaquiline maleate crystal run (temperature: 32.3 °C, start of heating). b HSOM data from a bedaquiline maleate crystal run 1 (temperature: 130.6 °C, melting). c HSOM data from a bedaquiline maleate crystal run 1 (temperature: 131.5 °C, melting). d HSOM data from a bedaquiline maleate crystal run 2 (temperature: 124.7 °C, melting). e HSOM data from a bedaquiline maleate crystal run 3 (temperature: 36.2 °C, start of heating). f HSOM data from a bedaquiline maleate crystal run 3 (temperature: 119.9 °C, onset melting).
Fig. 6.a Infrared spectra of bedaquiline benzoate and free base. b Infrared spectra of bedaquiline maleate and free base.