Improving co-amorphous drug formulations by the addition of the highly water soluble amino acid proline

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Standard

Improving co-amorphous drug formulations by the addition of the highly water soluble amino acid proline. / Jensen, Katrine Birgitte Tarp; Löbmann, Korbinian; Rades, Thomas; Grohganz, Holger.

In: Pharmaceutics, Vol. 6, No. 3, 2014, p. 416-435.

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Jensen, KBT, Löbmann, K, Rades, T & Grohganz, H 2014, 'Improving co-amorphous drug formulations by the addition of the highly water soluble amino acid proline', Pharmaceutics, vol. 6, no. 3, pp. 416-435. https://doi.org/10.3390/pharmaceutics6030416

APA

Jensen, K. B. T., Löbmann, K., Rades, T., & Grohganz, H. (2014). Improving co-amorphous drug formulations by the addition of the highly water soluble amino acid proline. Pharmaceutics, 6(3), 416-435. https://doi.org/10.3390/pharmaceutics6030416

Vancouver

Jensen KBT, Löbmann K, Rades T, Grohganz H. Improving co-amorphous drug formulations by the addition of the highly water soluble amino acid proline. Pharmaceutics. 2014;6(3):416-435. https://doi.org/10.3390/pharmaceutics6030416

Author

Jensen, Katrine Birgitte Tarp ; Löbmann, Korbinian ; Rades, Thomas ; Grohganz, Holger. / Improving co-amorphous drug formulations by the addition of the highly water soluble amino acid proline. In: Pharmaceutics. 2014 ; Vol. 6, No. 3. pp. 416-435.

Bibtex

@article{ed973544e5774370baa06a681a0568e6,
title = "Improving co-amorphous drug formulations by the addition of the highly water soluble amino acid proline",
abstract = "Co-amorphous drug amino acid mixtures were previously shown to be a promising approach to create physically stable amorphous systems with the improved dissolution properties of poorly water-soluble drugs. The aim of this work was to expand the co-amorphous drug amino acid mixture approach by combining the model drug, naproxen (NAP), with an amino acid to physically stabilize the co-amorphous system (tryptophan, TRP, or arginine, ARG) and a second highly soluble amino acid (proline, PRO) for an additional improvement of the dissolution rate. Co-amorphous drug-amino acid blends were prepared by ball milling and investigated for solid state characteristics, stability and the dissolution rate enhancement of NAP. All co-amorphous mixtures were stable at room temperature and 40 °C for a minimum of 84 days. PRO acted as a stabilizer for the co-amorphous system, including NAP–TRP, through enhancing the molecular interactions in the form of hydrogen bonds between all three components in the mixture. A salt formation between the acidic drug, NAP, and the basic amino acid, ARG, was found in co-amorphous NAP–ARG. In comparison to crystalline NAP, binary NAP–TRP and NAP–ARG, it could be shown that the highly soluble amino acid, PRO, improved the dissolution rate of NAP from the ternary co-amorphous systems in combination with either TRP or ARG. In conclusion, both the solubility of the amino acid and potential interactions between the molecules are critical parameters to consider in the development of co-amorphous formulations. ",
author = "Jensen, {Katrine Birgitte Tarp} and Korbinian L{\"o}bmann and Thomas Rades and Holger Grohganz",
year = "2014",
doi = "10.3390/pharmaceutics6030416",
language = "English",
volume = "6",
pages = "416--435",
journal = "Pharmaceutics",
issn = "1999-4923",
publisher = "MDPI AG",
number = "3",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Improving co-amorphous drug formulations by the addition of the highly water soluble amino acid proline

AU - Jensen, Katrine Birgitte Tarp

AU - Löbmann, Korbinian

AU - Rades, Thomas

AU - Grohganz, Holger

PY - 2014

Y1 - 2014

N2 - Co-amorphous drug amino acid mixtures were previously shown to be a promising approach to create physically stable amorphous systems with the improved dissolution properties of poorly water-soluble drugs. The aim of this work was to expand the co-amorphous drug amino acid mixture approach by combining the model drug, naproxen (NAP), with an amino acid to physically stabilize the co-amorphous system (tryptophan, TRP, or arginine, ARG) and a second highly soluble amino acid (proline, PRO) for an additional improvement of the dissolution rate. Co-amorphous drug-amino acid blends were prepared by ball milling and investigated for solid state characteristics, stability and the dissolution rate enhancement of NAP. All co-amorphous mixtures were stable at room temperature and 40 °C for a minimum of 84 days. PRO acted as a stabilizer for the co-amorphous system, including NAP–TRP, through enhancing the molecular interactions in the form of hydrogen bonds between all three components in the mixture. A salt formation between the acidic drug, NAP, and the basic amino acid, ARG, was found in co-amorphous NAP–ARG. In comparison to crystalline NAP, binary NAP–TRP and NAP–ARG, it could be shown that the highly soluble amino acid, PRO, improved the dissolution rate of NAP from the ternary co-amorphous systems in combination with either TRP or ARG. In conclusion, both the solubility of the amino acid and potential interactions between the molecules are critical parameters to consider in the development of co-amorphous formulations.

AB - Co-amorphous drug amino acid mixtures were previously shown to be a promising approach to create physically stable amorphous systems with the improved dissolution properties of poorly water-soluble drugs. The aim of this work was to expand the co-amorphous drug amino acid mixture approach by combining the model drug, naproxen (NAP), with an amino acid to physically stabilize the co-amorphous system (tryptophan, TRP, or arginine, ARG) and a second highly soluble amino acid (proline, PRO) for an additional improvement of the dissolution rate. Co-amorphous drug-amino acid blends were prepared by ball milling and investigated for solid state characteristics, stability and the dissolution rate enhancement of NAP. All co-amorphous mixtures were stable at room temperature and 40 °C for a minimum of 84 days. PRO acted as a stabilizer for the co-amorphous system, including NAP–TRP, through enhancing the molecular interactions in the form of hydrogen bonds between all three components in the mixture. A salt formation between the acidic drug, NAP, and the basic amino acid, ARG, was found in co-amorphous NAP–ARG. In comparison to crystalline NAP, binary NAP–TRP and NAP–ARG, it could be shown that the highly soluble amino acid, PRO, improved the dissolution rate of NAP from the ternary co-amorphous systems in combination with either TRP or ARG. In conclusion, both the solubility of the amino acid and potential interactions between the molecules are critical parameters to consider in the development of co-amorphous formulations.

U2 - 10.3390/pharmaceutics6030416

DO - 10.3390/pharmaceutics6030416

M3 - Journal article

C2 - 25025400

VL - 6

SP - 416

EP - 435

JO - Pharmaceutics

JF - Pharmaceutics

SN - 1999-4923

IS - 3

ER -

ID: 119243370