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Download fileContinuous Preparation of 1:1 Haloperidol–Maleic Acid Salt by a Novel Solvent-Free Method Using a Twin Screw Melt Extruder
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posted on 2017-02-28, 00:00 authored by Hung Lin Lee, Jaydip M. Vasoya, Marilia de Lima Cirqueira, Kuan Lin Yeh, Tu Lee, Abu T. M. SerajuddinSalts
are generally prepared by acid–base reaction in relatively
large volumes of organic solvents, followed by crystallization. In
this study, the potential for preparing a pharmaceutical salt between
haloperidol and maleic acid by a novel solvent-free method using a
twin-screw melt extruder was investigated. The pH–solubility
relationship between haloperidol and maleic acid in aqueous medium
was first determined, which demonstrated that 1:1 salt formation between
them was feasible (pHmax 4.8; salt solubility
4.7 mg/mL). Extrusion of a 1:1 mixture of haloperidol and maleic acid
at the extruder barrel temperature of 60 °C resulted in the formation
of a highly crystalline salt. The effects of operating temperature
and screw configuration on salt formation were also investigated,
and those two were identified as key processing parameters. Salts
were also prepared by solution crystallization from ethyl acetate,
liquid-assisted grinding, and heat-assisted grinding and compared
with those obtained by melt extrusion by using DSC, PXRD, TGA, and
optical microscopy. While similar salts were obtained by all methods,
both melt extrusion and solution crystallization yielded highly crystalline
materials with identical enthalpies of melting. During the pH-solubility
study, a salt hydrate form was also identified, which, upon heating,
converted to anhydrate similar to that obtained by other methods.
There were previous reports of the formation of cocrystals, but not
salts, by melt extrusion. 1H NMR and single-crystal X-ray
diffraction confirmed that a salt was indeed formed in the present
study. The haloperidol–maleic acid salt obtained was nonhygroscopic
in the moisture sorption study and converted to the hydrate form only
upon mixing with water. Thus, we are reporting for the first time
a relatively simple and solvent-free twin-screw melt extrusion method
for the preparation of a pharmaceutical salt that provides material
comparable to that obtained by solution crystallization and is amenable
to continuous manufacturing and easy scale up.