4.7 Article

Liquid Lipids Act as Polymorphic Modifiers of Tristearin-Based Formulations Produced by Melting Technologies

Journal

PHARMACEUTICS
Volume 13, Issue 7, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/pharmaceutics13071089

Keywords

spray congealing; lipid microparticles; triacylglycerol; drug release; stability; polymorphism

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This study evaluated the impact of different oral-approved liquid lipids on the polymorphism, phase transitions, and structure of solid lipid-based formulations, and their influence on drug release. The addition of liquid lipids was found to promote the transition of tristearin from the alpha-form to the stable beta-form, affecting the crystal structure of tristearin-based formulations and influencing the release behavior of a model hydrophilic drug. Overall, the addition of liquid lipids can be considered an interesting approach to control triglyceride crystallization in the beta-form, enabling the production of stable lipid formulations.
Despite the growing interest in lipid-based formulations, their polymorphism is still a challenge in the pharmaceutical industry. Understanding and controlling the polymorphic behavior of lipids is a key element for achieving the quality and preventing stability issues. This study aims to evaluate the impact of different oral-approved liquid lipids (LL) on the polymorphism, phase transitions and structure of solid lipid-based formulations and explore their influence on drug release. The LL investigated were isopropyl myristate, ethyl oleate, oleic acid, medium chain trigycerides, vitamin E acetate, glyceryl monooleate, lecithin and sorbitane monooleate. Spray-congealing was selected as an example of a melting-based solvent-free manufacturing method to produce microparticles (MPs) of tristearin (Dynasan(R)118). During the production process, tristearin MPs crystallized in the metastable alpha-form. Stability studied evidenced a slow phase transition to the stable beta-polymorph overtime, with the presence of the alpha-form still detected after 60 days of storage at 25 degrees C. The addition of 10% w/w of LL promoted the transition of tristearin from the alpha-form to the stable beta-form with a kinetic varying from few minutes to days, depending on the specific LL. The combination of various techniques (DSC, X-ray diffraction analysis, Hot-stage polarized light microscopy, SEM) showed that the addition of LL significantly modified the crystal structure of tristearin-based formulations at different length scales. Both the polymorphic form and the LL addition had a strong influence on the release behavior of a model hydrophilic drug (caffeine). Overall, the addition of LL can be considered an interesting approach to control triglyceride crystallization in the beta-form. From the industrial viewpoint, this approach might be advantageous as any polymorphic change will be complete before storage, hence enabling the production of stable lipid formulations.

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