4.5 Article

Role of blooming in determining the storage stability of lipid-based dosage forms

Journal

JOURNAL OF PHARMACEUTICAL SCIENCES
Volume 93, Issue 12, Pages 2962-2971

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE INC
DOI: 10.1002/jps.20210

Keywords

lipids; controlled release; solid dispersion; dissolution

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Gelucire 50/13 alone and solid dispersions in this material containing two model drugs (10% w/w caffeine and paracetarnol) have been studied with a view to establishing the mechanism underpinning changes in drug-release characteristics as a function of storage time and temperature. The lipid systems were fabricated into tablets and stored for up to 180 days at temperatures of 20 and 37degreesC. The dispersions were studied using differential scanning calorimetry (DSC), scanning electron microscopy, and dissolution testing. DSC studies indicated that the Gelucire 50/13 exists in two principal melting forms (melting points 38 and 43degreesC that undergo transformation to the higher melting form on storage at 37degreesC. Scanning electron microscopy studies indicated that the systems exhibit blooming, with crystal formation on the surface being apparent on storage at both temperatures. The dissolution rate increased on storage, with the effect being particularly marked at higher storage temperatures and for the paracetamol systems. However, whereas these changes corresponded well to those seen for the morphology, the correlation between the changes in dissolution and those of the DSC profiles was poor. The study has suggested a novel explanation for the storage instability of Gelucire 50/13 whereby the change in dissolution is associated not with molecular rearrangement as such but with the gross distribution of the constituent components, this in turn altering the physical integrity of the lipid bases. (C)2004Wiley-Liss,Inc.andthe American Pharmacists Association.

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