4.7 Article

An Investigation into the Role of Polymeric Carriers on Crystal Growth within Amorphous Solid Dispersion Systems

Journal

MOLECULAR PHARMACEUTICS
Volume 12, Issue 4, Pages 1180-1192

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/mp500702s

Keywords

felodipine; amorphous; solid dispersions; Flory-Huggins; nucleation and growth; crystal growth kinetics; viscosity; Raman spectral mapping; PVP; Soluplus; HPMCAS

Funding

  1. Royal Society

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Using phase diagrams derived from Flory-Huggins theory, we defined the thermodynamic state of amorphous felodipine within three different polymeric carriers. Variation in the solubility and miscibility of felodipine within different polymeric materials (using FH theory) has been identified and used to select the most suitable polymeric carriers for the production of amorphous drugpolymer solid dispersions. With this information, amorphous felodipine solid dispersions were manufactured using three different polymeric materials (HPMCAS-HF, Soluplus, and PVPK15) at predefined drug loadings, and the crystal growth rates of felodipine from these solid dispersions were investigated. Crystallization of amorphous felodipine was studied using Raman spectral imaging and polarized light microscopy. Using this data, we examined the correlation among several characteristics of solid dispersions to the crystal growth rate of felodipine. An exponential relationship was found to exist between drug loading and crystal growth rate. Moreover, crystal growth within all selected amorphous drugpolymer solid dispersion systems were viscosity dependent (eta(-xi)). The exponent, xi, was estimated to be 1.36 at a temperature of 80 degrees C. Values of xi exceeding 1 may indicate strong viscosity dependent crystal growth in the amorphous drugpolymer solid dispersion systems. We argue that the elevated exponent value (xi > 1) is a result of drug-polymer mixing which leads to a less fragile amorphous drug-polymer solid dispersion system. All systems investigated displayed an upper critical solution temperature, and the solid-liquid boundary was always higher than the spinodal decomposition curve. Furthermore, for PVPFD amorphous dispersions at drug loadings exceeding 0.6 volume ratio, the mechanism of phase separation within the metastable zone was found to be driven by nucleation and growth rather than liquid-liquid separation.

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