posted on 2022-12-06, 17:34authored bySara Ottoboni, Cameron J. Brown, Bhavik Mehta, Guillermo Jimeno, Niall A. Mitchell, Jan Sefcik, Chris J. Price
To facilitate integrated end-to-end pharmaceutical manufacturing
using digital design, a model capable of transferring material property
information between operations to predict product attributes in integrated
purification processes has been developed. The focus of the work reported
here combines filtration and washing operations used in active pharmaceutical
ingredient (API) purification and isolation to predict isolation performance
without the need of extensive experimental work. A fixed Carman–Kozeny
filtration model is integrated with several washing mechanisms (displacement,
dilution, and axial dispersion). Two limiting cases are considered:
case 1 where there is no change in the solid phase during isolation
(no particle dissolution and/or growth), and case 2 where the liquid
and solid phases are equilibrated over the course of isolation. In
reality, all actual manufacturing conditions would be bracketed by
these two limiting cases, so consideration of these two scenarios
provides rigorous theoretical bounds for assessing isolation performance.
This modeling approach aims to facilitate the selection of most appropriate
models suitable for different isolation scenarios, without the requirement
to use overly complex models for straightforward isolation processes.
Mefenamic acid and paracetamol were selected as representative model
compounds to assess a range of isolation scenarios. In each case,
the objective of the models was to identify the purity of the product
reached with a fixed wash ratio and minimize the changes to the crystalline
particle attributes that occur during the isolation process. This
was undertaken with the aim of identifying suitable criteria for the
selection of appropriate filtration and washing models corresponding
to relevant processing conditions, and ultimately developing guidelines
for the digital design of filtration and washing processes.