The Influence of Polymers on the Supersaturation Potential of Poor and Good Glass Formers

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Standard

The Influence of Polymers on the Supersaturation Potential of Poor and Good Glass Formers. / Blaabjerg, Lasse Ingerslev; Grohganz, Holger; Lindenberg, Eleanor; Löbmann, Korbinian; Mullertz, Anette ; Rades, Thomas.

In: Pharmaceutics, Vol. 10, No. 4, 164, 21.09.2018.

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Blaabjerg, LI, Grohganz, H, Lindenberg, E, Löbmann, K, Mullertz, A & Rades, T 2018, 'The Influence of Polymers on the Supersaturation Potential of Poor and Good Glass Formers', Pharmaceutics, vol. 10, no. 4, 164. https://doi.org/10.3390/pharmaceutics10040164

APA

Blaabjerg, L. I., Grohganz, H., Lindenberg, E., Löbmann, K., Mullertz, A., & Rades, T. (2018). The Influence of Polymers on the Supersaturation Potential of Poor and Good Glass Formers. Pharmaceutics, 10(4), [164]. https://doi.org/10.3390/pharmaceutics10040164

Vancouver

Blaabjerg LI, Grohganz H, Lindenberg E, Löbmann K, Mullertz A, Rades T. The Influence of Polymers on the Supersaturation Potential of Poor and Good Glass Formers. Pharmaceutics. 2018 Sep 21;10(4). 164. https://doi.org/10.3390/pharmaceutics10040164

Author

Blaabjerg, Lasse Ingerslev ; Grohganz, Holger ; Lindenberg, Eleanor ; Löbmann, Korbinian ; Mullertz, Anette ; Rades, Thomas. / The Influence of Polymers on the Supersaturation Potential of Poor and Good Glass Formers. In: Pharmaceutics. 2018 ; Vol. 10, No. 4.

Bibtex

@article{c4ad81daa1b3498899a6a24967056064,
title = "The Influence of Polymers on the Supersaturation Potential of Poor and Good Glass Formers",
abstract = "The increasing number of poorly water-soluble drug candidates in pharmaceutical development is a major challenge. Enabling techniques such as amorphization of the crystalline drug can result in supersaturation with respect to the thermodynamically most stable form of the drug, thereby possibly increasing its bioavailability after oral administration. The ease with which such crystalline drugs can be amorphized is known as their glass forming ability (GFA) and is commonly described by the critical cooling rate. In this study, the supersaturation potential, i.e., the maximum apparent degree of supersaturation, of poor and good glass formers is investigated in the absence or presence of either hypromellose acetate succinate L-grade (HPMCAS-L) or vinylpyrrolidine-vinyl acetate copolymer (PVPVA64) in fasted state simulated intestinal fluid (FaSSIF). The GFA of cinnarizine, itraconazole, ketoconazole, naproxen, phenytoin, and probenecid was determined by melt quenching the crystalline drugs to determine their respective critical cooling rate. The inherent supersaturation potential of the drugs in FaSSIF was determined by a solvent shift method where the respective drugs were dissolved in dimethyl sulfoxide and then added to FaSSIF. This study showed that the poor glass formers naproxen, phenytoin, and probenecid could not supersaturate on their own, however for some drug:polymer combinations of naproxen and phenytoin, supersaturation of the drug was enabled by the polymer. In contrast, all of the good glass formers—cinnarizine, itraconazole, and ketoconazole—could supersaturate on their own. Furthermore, the maximum achievable concentration of the good glass formers was unaffected by the presence of a polymer.",
author = "Blaabjerg, {Lasse Ingerslev} and Holger Grohganz and Eleanor Lindenberg and Korbinian L{\"o}bmann and Anette Mullertz and Thomas Rades",
year = "2018",
month = sep,
day = "21",
doi = "10.3390/pharmaceutics10040164",
language = "English",
volume = "10",
journal = "Pharmaceutics",
issn = "1999-4923",
publisher = "MDPI AG",
number = "4",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - The Influence of Polymers on the Supersaturation Potential of Poor and Good Glass Formers

AU - Blaabjerg, Lasse Ingerslev

AU - Grohganz, Holger

AU - Lindenberg, Eleanor

AU - Löbmann, Korbinian

AU - Mullertz, Anette

AU - Rades, Thomas

PY - 2018/9/21

Y1 - 2018/9/21

N2 - The increasing number of poorly water-soluble drug candidates in pharmaceutical development is a major challenge. Enabling techniques such as amorphization of the crystalline drug can result in supersaturation with respect to the thermodynamically most stable form of the drug, thereby possibly increasing its bioavailability after oral administration. The ease with which such crystalline drugs can be amorphized is known as their glass forming ability (GFA) and is commonly described by the critical cooling rate. In this study, the supersaturation potential, i.e., the maximum apparent degree of supersaturation, of poor and good glass formers is investigated in the absence or presence of either hypromellose acetate succinate L-grade (HPMCAS-L) or vinylpyrrolidine-vinyl acetate copolymer (PVPVA64) in fasted state simulated intestinal fluid (FaSSIF). The GFA of cinnarizine, itraconazole, ketoconazole, naproxen, phenytoin, and probenecid was determined by melt quenching the crystalline drugs to determine their respective critical cooling rate. The inherent supersaturation potential of the drugs in FaSSIF was determined by a solvent shift method where the respective drugs were dissolved in dimethyl sulfoxide and then added to FaSSIF. This study showed that the poor glass formers naproxen, phenytoin, and probenecid could not supersaturate on their own, however for some drug:polymer combinations of naproxen and phenytoin, supersaturation of the drug was enabled by the polymer. In contrast, all of the good glass formers—cinnarizine, itraconazole, and ketoconazole—could supersaturate on their own. Furthermore, the maximum achievable concentration of the good glass formers was unaffected by the presence of a polymer.

AB - The increasing number of poorly water-soluble drug candidates in pharmaceutical development is a major challenge. Enabling techniques such as amorphization of the crystalline drug can result in supersaturation with respect to the thermodynamically most stable form of the drug, thereby possibly increasing its bioavailability after oral administration. The ease with which such crystalline drugs can be amorphized is known as their glass forming ability (GFA) and is commonly described by the critical cooling rate. In this study, the supersaturation potential, i.e., the maximum apparent degree of supersaturation, of poor and good glass formers is investigated in the absence or presence of either hypromellose acetate succinate L-grade (HPMCAS-L) or vinylpyrrolidine-vinyl acetate copolymer (PVPVA64) in fasted state simulated intestinal fluid (FaSSIF). The GFA of cinnarizine, itraconazole, ketoconazole, naproxen, phenytoin, and probenecid was determined by melt quenching the crystalline drugs to determine their respective critical cooling rate. The inherent supersaturation potential of the drugs in FaSSIF was determined by a solvent shift method where the respective drugs were dissolved in dimethyl sulfoxide and then added to FaSSIF. This study showed that the poor glass formers naproxen, phenytoin, and probenecid could not supersaturate on their own, however for some drug:polymer combinations of naproxen and phenytoin, supersaturation of the drug was enabled by the polymer. In contrast, all of the good glass formers—cinnarizine, itraconazole, and ketoconazole—could supersaturate on their own. Furthermore, the maximum achievable concentration of the good glass formers was unaffected by the presence of a polymer.

U2 - 10.3390/pharmaceutics10040164

DO - 10.3390/pharmaceutics10040164

M3 - Journal article

C2 - 30241425

VL - 10

JO - Pharmaceutics

JF - Pharmaceutics

SN - 1999-4923

IS - 4

M1 - 164

ER -

ID: 202820162