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Dry coating of micronized API powders for improved dissolution of directly compacted tablets with high drug loading.
Int J Pharm. 2013 Feb 14; 442(1-2):74-85.IJ

Abstract

Motivated by our recent study showing improved flow and dissolution rate of the active pharmaceutical ingredient (API) powders (20 μm) produced via simultaneous micronization and surface modification through continuous fluid energy milling (FEM) process, the performance of blends and direct compacted tablets with high drug loading is examined. Performance of 50 μm API powders dry coated without micronization is also considered for comparison. Blends of micronized, non-micronized, dry coated or uncoated API powders at 30, 60 and 70% drug loading, are examined. The results show that the blends containing dry coated API powders, even micronized ones, have excellent flowability and high bulk density compared to the blends containing uncoated API, which are required for direct compaction. As the drug loading increases, the difference between dry coated and uncoated blends is more pronounced, as seen in the proposed bulk density-FFC phase map. Dry coating led to improved tablet compactibility profiles, corresponding with the improvements in blend compressibility. The most significant advantage is in tablet dissolution where for all drug loadings, the t(80) for the tablets with dry coated APIs was well under 5 min, indicating that this approach can produce nearly instant release direct compacted tablets at high drug loadings.

Authors+Show Affiliations

New Jersey Center for Engineered Particulates, New Jersey Institute of Technology, Newark, NJ 07102, USA.No affiliation info availableNo affiliation info available

Pub Type(s)

Journal Article
Research Support, U.S. Gov't, Non-P.H.S.

Language

eng

PubMed ID

22921376

Citation

Han, Xi, et al. "Dry Coating of Micronized API Powders for Improved Dissolution of Directly Compacted Tablets With High Drug Loading." International Journal of Pharmaceutics, vol. 442, no. 1-2, 2013, pp. 74-85.
Han X, Ghoroi C, Davé R. Dry coating of micronized API powders for improved dissolution of directly compacted tablets with high drug loading. Int J Pharm. 2013;442(1-2):74-85.
Han, X., Ghoroi, C., & Davé, R. (2013). Dry coating of micronized API powders for improved dissolution of directly compacted tablets with high drug loading. International Journal of Pharmaceutics, 442(1-2), 74-85. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ijpharm.2012.08.004
Han X, Ghoroi C, Davé R. Dry Coating of Micronized API Powders for Improved Dissolution of Directly Compacted Tablets With High Drug Loading. Int J Pharm. 2013 Feb 14;442(1-2):74-85. PubMed PMID: 22921376.
* Article titles in AMA citation format should be in sentence-case
TY - JOUR T1 - Dry coating of micronized API powders for improved dissolution of directly compacted tablets with high drug loading. AU - Han,Xi, AU - Ghoroi,Chinmay, AU - Davé,Rajesh, Y1 - 2012/08/08/ PY - 2012/01/28/received PY - 2012/07/25/revised PY - 2012/08/01/accepted PY - 2012/8/28/entrez PY - 2012/8/28/pubmed PY - 2013/7/31/medline SP - 74 EP - 85 JF - International journal of pharmaceutics JO - Int J Pharm VL - 442 IS - 1-2 N2 - Motivated by our recent study showing improved flow and dissolution rate of the active pharmaceutical ingredient (API) powders (20 μm) produced via simultaneous micronization and surface modification through continuous fluid energy milling (FEM) process, the performance of blends and direct compacted tablets with high drug loading is examined. Performance of 50 μm API powders dry coated without micronization is also considered for comparison. Blends of micronized, non-micronized, dry coated or uncoated API powders at 30, 60 and 70% drug loading, are examined. The results show that the blends containing dry coated API powders, even micronized ones, have excellent flowability and high bulk density compared to the blends containing uncoated API, which are required for direct compaction. As the drug loading increases, the difference between dry coated and uncoated blends is more pronounced, as seen in the proposed bulk density-FFC phase map. Dry coating led to improved tablet compactibility profiles, corresponding with the improvements in blend compressibility. The most significant advantage is in tablet dissolution where for all drug loadings, the t(80) for the tablets with dry coated APIs was well under 5 min, indicating that this approach can produce nearly instant release direct compacted tablets at high drug loadings. SN - 1873-3476 UR - https://www.unboundmedicine.com/medline/citation/22921376/Dry_coating_of_micronized_API_powders_for_improved_dissolution_of_directly_compacted_tablets_with_high_drug_loading_ L2 - https://linkinghub.elsevier.com/retrieve/pii/S0378-5173(12)00798-3 DB - PRIME DP - Unbound Medicine ER -