posted on 2022-08-25, 17:40authored byMaxime D. Charpentier, Jan-Joris Devogelaer, Arnoud Tijink, Hugo Meekes, Paul Tinnemans, Elias Vlieg, René de Gelder, Karen Johnston, Joop H. ter Horst
Pharmaceutical cocrystals are highly interesting due
to their effect
on physicochemical properties and their role in separation technologies,
particularly for chiral molecules. Detection of new cocrystals is
a challenge, and robust screening methods are required. As numerous
techniques exist that differ in their crystallization mechanisms,
their efficiencies depend on the coformers investigated. The most
important parameters characterizing the methods are the (a) screenable
coformer fraction, (b) coformer success rate, (c) ability to give
several cocrystals per successful coformer, (d) identification of
new stable phases, and (e) experimental convenience. Based on these
parameters, we compare and quantify the performance of three methods:
liquid-assisted grinding, solvent evaporation, and saturation temperature
measurements of mixtures. These methods were used to screen 30 molecules,
predicted by a network-based link prediction algorithm (described
in Cryst. Growth Des. 2021,21(6), 3428–3437)
as potential coformers for the target molecule praziquantel. The solvent
evaporation method presented more drawbacks than advantages, liquid-assisted
grinding emerged as the most successful and the quickest, while saturation
temperature measurements provided equally good results in a slower
route yielding additional solubility information relevant for future
screenings, single-crystal growth, and cocrystal production processes.
Seventeen cocrystals were found, with 14 showing stability and 12
structures resolved.