4.6 Article

Application of the combinative particle size reduction technology H 42 to produce fast dissolving glibenclamide tablets

Journal

EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF PHARMACEUTICAL SCIENCES
Volume 49, Issue 4, Pages 565-577

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE BV
DOI: 10.1016/j.ejps.2013.04.003

Keywords

Poorly soluble drugs; Particle size reduction; Drug nanocrystals; Spray-drying; High pressure homogenization; Tableting

Funding

  1. DAAD (Deutscher Akademischer Austausch Dienst, German Academic Exchange Service)

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Standard particle size reduction techniques such as high pressure homogenization or wet bead milling are frequently used in the production of nanosuspensions. The need for micronized starting material and long process times are their evident disadvantages. Combinative particle size reduction technologies have been developed to overcome the drawbacks of the standard techniques. The H 42 combinative technology consists of a drug pre-treatment by means of spray-drying followed by standard high pressure homogenization. In the present paper, spray-drying process parameters influencing the diminution effectiveness, such as drug and surfactant concentration, were systematically analyzed. Subsequently, the untreated and pre-treated drug powders were homogenized for 20 cycles at 1500 bar. For untreated, micronized glibenclamide, the particle size analysis revealed a mean particle size of 772 nm and volume-based size distribution values of 2.686 mu m (d50%) and 14.423 mu m (d90%). The use of pre-treated material (10:1 glibenclamide/docusate sodium salt ratio spray-dried as ethanolic solution) resulted in a mean particle size of 236 nm and volume-based size distribution values of 0.131 mu m (d50%) and 0.2851 mu m (d90%). These results were markedly improved compared to the standard process. The nanosuspensions were further transferred into tablet formulations. Wet granulation, freeze-drying and spray-drying were investigated as downstream methods to produce dry intermediates. Regarding the dissolution rate, the rank order of the downstream processes was as follows: Spray-drying > freeze-drying > wet granulation. The best drug release (90% within 10 min) was obtained for tablets produced with spray-dried nanosuspension containing 2% mannitol as matrix former. In comparison, the tablets processed with micronized glibenclamide showed a drug release of only 26% after 10 min. The H 42 combinative technology could be successfully applied in the production of small drug nanocrystals. A nanosuspension transfer to tablets that maintained the fast dissolution properties of the drug nanocrystals was successfully achieved. (C) 2013 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

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