4.7 Article

Impact of Surface Properties of Core Material on the Stability of Hot Melt-Coated Multiparticulate Systems

Journal

PHARMACEUTICS
Volume 13, Issue 3, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/pharmaceutics13030366

Keywords

hot melt coating; lipid-based formulation; product instability; surface energy characteristics; crystal growth; phase separation

Funding

  1. Austrian COMET Program by the Austrian Federal Ministry of Transport, Innovation, and Technology (BMVIT)
  2. Austrian Federal Ministry of Economy, Family, and Youth (BMWFJ)
  3. State of Styria (Styrian Funding Agency SFG)
  4. Hermes Arzneimittel GmbH (Pullach, Germany)
  5. Harro Hofliger GmbH (Allmersbach i. T., Germany)
  6. FOSTAG Formenbau AG (Steinen, Switzerland)

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The study investigated the interaction between active pharmaceutical ingredients (APIs) and lipid-based coating, as well as their changes during storage. Experimental results on surface properties of APIs, coating composition, water sorption alteration of coated particles, crystal growth of lipids in the coating, and cleavage work necessary to overcome coating adhesion provided insights into addressing drug release instability challenges.
Hot melt coating (HMC) of an active pharmaceutical ingredient (API) powder with lipid-based excipients is an innovative method for manufacturing patient-convenient dosage forms. However, drug release instability is still its main industrial challenge. The correlation between the unstable pharmaceutical product performance with the solid-state alteration of lipids is currently well-investigated. The remaining problem is the inconsistent release alteration of different APIs coated with the same lipid after storage, such as faster release in some cases and slower release in others. The interaction between API surface and lipid-based coating and its alteration during storage were investigated in this work. The surface properties of five different APIs and the coating composition of tripalmitin and polysorbate 65 were screened via Washburn and pendant drop methods, respectively. Metformin hydrochloride and hydrochlorothiazide particles were each coated with the coating composition. The water sorption alteration of coated particles and the crystal growth of tripalmitin in the coating after storage were measured via tensiometry and X-ray diffraction. The cleavage work necessary to overcome the adhesion of coating composition on the core surface was calculated for each API. The accelerated release of the polar core (metformin) after storage was correlated with a low cleavage work and a distinctive phase separation. In contrast, a decelerated release of the hydrophobic core (hydrochlorothiazide) was favored by the crystal growth of the lipid-based coating. The gained knowledge can be used to design the product stability during the formulation development.

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