posted on 2024-03-12, 04:04authored byChengxuan Guo, Nicole Wendel, Ally Lee, Shonda Monette, Brian Morrison, Dominic Frisbie, Earlene Erbe, Renée S. Cole, Max Lei Geng
The pharmaceutical and medicine manufacturing
industry
has become
the largest industrial sector for the employment of chemists, indicating
a need for experiments with a pharmaceutical sciences context in the
undergraduate chemistry curriculum. In the pharmaceutical industry,
testing drug dissolution is a key analytical task for solid oral dosage
forms that is performed in different phases of drug development to
test the release behavior of new formulations, ensure consistency
between manufacturing lots, and help predict the in vivo absorption of the drug substance after administration. However,
there are a limited number of laboratory experiments in dissolution
testing developed for the undergraduate chemistry curriculum. To help
students obtain hands-on experience in dissolution testing, a protocol
has been developed for an undergraduate chemistry laboratory course
for students to build a dissolution apparatus, monitor dissolution
processes, model the dissolution to extract kinetic parameters, and
evaluate the consistency between dissolution curves with FDA regulated
methods. Students successfully collected dissolution curves and completed
the modeling analysis with nonlinear least-squares fitting. The designed
dissolution protocol has been evaluated to have consistency and reproducibility
to be implemented in the undergraduate chemistry laboratory curriculum.