posted on 2013-12-02, 00:00authored byJunia
M. Pereira, Raquel Mejia-Ariza, Grace A. Ilevbare, Heather
E. McGettigan, Nammalwar Sriranganathan, Lynne S. Taylor, Richey M. Davis, Kevin J. Edgar
Clarithromycin (CLA) is an aminomacrolide
antibiotic whose physical
properties are fascinating and challenging. It has very poor solubility
at neutral intestinal pH, but much better solubility under acidic
conditions due to amine protonation. The improved solubility in an
acid environment is confounded by the poor chemical stability of clarithromycin
that is quite labile toward acid-catalyzed degradation. This creates
a complex system under gastrointestinal (GI) conditions: dissolution
in the stomach, degradation, potential for precipitation in the small
intestine, and interplay with the formulation components. We report
herein a study of amorphous solid dispersion (ASD) of CLA with carboxyl-containing
cellulose derivatives, which have recently been shown to be excellent
ASD matrices for maximizing oral bioavailability. This approach was
intended to improve CLA solubility in neutral media while minimizing
release in an acid environment, and thereby increase its uptake from
the small intestine. Amorphous polymer/CLA nanoparticles were also
prepared by high-shear mixing in a multi-inlet vortex mixer (MIVM).
Different extents of release were observed at low pH from the various
formulations. Thus the solubility increase from nanosizing was deleterious
to the concentration of intact CLA obtained upon reaching small intestine
conditions; the high extent of release at gastric pH led to complete
degradation of CLA. Using pH-switch experiments, it was possible to
separate the effects of loss of CLA from solution by crystallization
vs. that from chemical degradation. It was found that the hydrophobic
cellulose derivative cellulose acetate adipate propionate (CAAdP)
was effective at protecting CLA from dissolution in the stomach, and
preventing CLA decomposition at low pH; 54% of CLA in CAADP ASD was
released intact, vs. 0% and 6% from HPMCAS and CMCAB ASDs, respectively.
We conclude that protection against degradation is central to enhancing
overall release of intact CLA from ASD formulations;
the formulations studied herein have great promise for simultaneous
CLA solubility enhancement and protection from loss to chemical degradation,
thereby reducing dose requirements and potentially decreasing colonic
exposure to CLA (reduced colonic exposure is expected to minimize
killing of beneficial colonic bacteria by CLA).