4.5 Article

Membrane-Based Solvent Exchange Process for Purification of API Crystal Suspensions

Journal

MEMBRANES
Volume 13, Issue 3, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/membranes13030263

Keywords

diafiltration; long acting injectables; pharmaceutical crystal suspensions; organic solvent nanofiltration

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Membrane-based diafiltration was used to remove ethanol from the API crystal suspension, reducing the solvent concentration below the specified limit. The size and form of the crystals remained unchanged during the solvent exchange process. This work is significant for bottom-up API production and provides a foundation for further experimental design in solvent exchange processes.
Bottom-up approaches to producing aqueous crystal suspensions of active pharmaceutical ingredients (APIs), such as anti-solvent crystallisation, are gaining interest as they offer better control over surface properties compared to top-down approaches. However, one of the major challenges that needs to be addressed is the removal of organic solvents after the crystallisation step due to strict limitations regarding human exposure. Within this work, we investigated a process concept for the removal of solvent (i.e., ethanol) from the API crystal suspension using membrane-based diafiltration. A four-stage diafiltration process successfully reduced the ethanol concentration in the API (here, naproxen) crystal suspension below 0.5 wt% (the residual solvent limit as per ICH guidelines) with a water consumption of 1.5 g of added water per g of feed. The solvent exchange process had no negative influence on the stability of the crystals in suspension, as their size and polymorphic form remained unchanged. This work is a step towards the bottom-up production of API crystal suspension by applying solvent/anti-solvent crystallisation. It provides the proof of concept for establishing a process of organic solvent removal and offers an experimental framework to serve as the foundation for the design of experiments implementing a solvent exchange in API production processes.

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