Modeling
Recrystallization Kinetics Following the
Dissolution of Amorphous Drugs
Posted on 2019-12-18 - 19:39
Amorphous phases are frequently employed to overcome
the solubility
limitation that is nowadays commonplace in developmental small-molecule
drugs intended for oral administration. However, since the solubility
enhancement has finite longevity (it is a “kinetic solubility”
effect), characterizing its duration (i.e., the so-called “parachute”
effect) can be important for optimizing a formulation with regard
to its in vivo exposure. Two semiempirical models,
based on dispersive kinetics theory, are evaluated for their ability
to precisely describe experimental transients depicting a loss in
supersaturation (initially generated by the dissolution of the amorphous
phase) over time, as the solubilized drug recrystallizes. It is found
that in cases where the drug solubility significantly exceeds that
of the crystal at longer times, the mechanism has substantial “denucleation”
(dissolution) character. On the other hand, “nucleation and
growth” (recrystallization) kinetics best describe systems
in which the recrystallization goes to completion within the experimental
time frame. Kinetic solubility profiles taken from the recent literature
are modeled for the following drugs: glibenclamide, indomethacin,
loratadine, and terfenadine. In the last case, a combination of three
different kinetic models, two classical ones plus the dispersive model,
are used together in describing the entire dissolution–recrystallization
transient of the drug, obtaining a fit of R2 = 0.993. By precisely characterizing the duration of the “parachute” in vitro (e.g., under biorelevant conditions), the proposed
models can be useful in predicting trends and thereby guiding formulation
development and optimization.
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Skrdla, Peter J.; Floyd, Philip D.; Dell’Orco, Philip C. (2019). Modeling
Recrystallization Kinetics Following the
Dissolution of Amorphous Drugs. ACS Publications. Collection. https://doi.org/10.1021/acs.molpharmaceut.9b00940