4.7 Article

Direct Powder Extrusion of Paracetamol Loaded Mixtures for 3D Printed Pharmaceutics for Personalized Medicine via Low Temperature Thermal Processing

Journal

PHARMACEUTICS
Volume 13, Issue 6, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/pharmaceutics13060907

Keywords

3D printing; personalized medicine; hot melt extrusion; starch; paracetamol; hydroxypropyl cellulose

Funding

  1. Provincial Council of Biscay [3/12/CR/2017/00040]
  2. Health Department of the Basque Government in the 3D FARMA project
  3. Support to the science, technology and innovation research network program from Gipuzkoa with the 3D I+MED project

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Three-dimensional printed drug development using potato starch and hydroxypropyl cellulose mixtures loaded with paracetamol has shown potential for personalized medicine, with drug recovery highly dependent on initial moisture levels and slower drug release observed in aged samples.
Three-dimensional printed drug development is nowadays an active area in the pharmaceutical industry, where the search for an appropriate edible carrier that permits the thermal processing of the mixture at temperature levels that are safe for the drug is an important field of study. Here, potato starch and hydroxypropyl cellulose based mixtures loaded with paracetamol up to 50% in weight were processed by hot melt extrusion at 85 degrees C to test their suitability to be thermally processed. The extruded mixtures were tested by liquid chromatography to analyze their release curves and were thermally characterized. The drug recovery was observed to be highly dependent on the initial moisture level of the mixture, the samples being prepared with an addition of water at a ratio of 3% in weight proportional to the starch amount, highly soluble and easy to extrude. The release curves showed a slow and steady drug liberation compared to a commercially available paracetamol tablet, reaching the 100% of recovery at 60 min. The samples aged for 6 weeks showed slower drug release curves compared to fresh samples, this effect being attributable to the loss of moisture. The paracetamol loaded mixture in powder form was used to print pills with different sizes and geometries in a fused deposition modelling three-dimensional printer modified with a commercially available powder extrusion head, showing the potential of this formulation for use in personalized medicine.

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