posted on 2014-11-05, 00:00authored byNaga Kiran Duggirala, Adam J. Smith, Łukasz Wojtas, R. Douglas Shytle, Michael J. Zaworotko
Current
lithium drugs are plagued with a narrow therapeutic window
and tend to be hygroscopic. However, they remain the gold standard
for treating manic episodes in bipolar disorder. In this contribution,
we report a crystal engineering study aimed at the preparation and
characterization of ionic cocrystals (ICCs) of lithium chloride (LIC)
and lithium bromide (LIB) with glucose (GLU). The structure of LIBGLU
was studied by single-crystal X-ray diffraction and found to be isostructural
with related sodium chloride–glucose ICCs. The physical stability
of LICGLU was compared to that of LIC at 50% RH and 25 °C and
through dynamic vapor sorption analysis. The blood and brain pharmacokinetics
of LICGLU were compared to those of LIC in rat models and revealed
little change in performance. This study reveals that ICCs can modestly
improve the solid-form stability of lithium salts without impacting
in vivo performance, a step toward enabling the development of the
next generation of lithium therapeutics.