Crystal Engineering Approach To Forming Cocrystals of
Amine Hydrochlorides with Organic Acids. Molecular
Complexes of Fluoxetine Hydrochloride with Benzoic,
Succinic, and Fumaric Acids
posted on 2004-10-20, 00:00authored byScott L. Childs, Leonard J. Chyall, Jeanette T. Dunlap, Valeriya N. Smolenskaya, Barbara C. Stahly, G. Patrick Stahly
A crystal engineering strategy for designing cocrystals of pharmaceuticals is presented. The
strategy increases the probability of discovering useful cocrystals and decreases the number of experiments
that are needed by selecting API:guest combinations that have the greatest potential of forming energetically
and structurally robust interactions. Our approach involves multicomponent cocrystallization of hydrochloride
salts, wherein strong hydrogen bond donors are introduced to interact with chloride ions that are underutilized
as hydrogen bond acceptors. The strategy is particularly effective in producing cocrystals of amine
hydrochlorides with neutral organic acid guests. As an example of the approach, we report the discovery
of three cocrystals containing fluoxetine hydrochloride (1), which is the active ingredient in the popular
antidepressant Prozac. A 1:1 cocrystal was prepared with 1 and benzoic acid (2), while succinic acid and
fumaric acid were each cocrystallized with 1 to provide 2:1 cocrystals of fluoxetine hydrochloride:succinic
acid (3) and fluoxetine hydrochloride:fumaric acid (4). The presence of a guest molecule along with fluoxetine
hydrochloride in the same crystal structure results in a solid phase with altered physical properties when
compared to the known crystalline form of fluoxetine hydrochloride. On the basis of intrinsic dissolution
rate experiments, cocrystals 2 and 4 dissolve more slowly than 1, and 3 dissolves more quickly than 1.
Powder dissolution experiments demonstrated that the solid present at equilibrium corresponds to the
cocrystal for 2 and 4, while 3 completely converted to 1 upon prolonged slurry in water.