Evaluation of various dissolution media for predicting in vivo performance of class I and II drugs

被引:759
|
作者
Galia, E
Nicolaides, E
Hörter, D
Löbenberg, R
Reppas, C
Dressman, JB
机构
[1] Univ Frankfurt, Inst Pharmazeut Technol, D-60439 Frankfurt, Germany
[2] Univ Athens, Dept Pharm, GR-15771 Athens, Greece
关键词
dissolution; physiological media; milk; compendial media; acetaminophen; metoprolol; danazol; mefenamic acid; ketoconazole;
D O I
10.1023/A:1011910801212
中图分类号
O6 [化学];
学科分类号
0703 ;
摘要
Purpose. In this paper we seek to verify the differences in dissolution behavior between class I and class II drugs and to evaluate the suitability of two new physiologically based media, of Simulated Gastric Fluid (SGF) and of milk for their ability to forecast trends in the in vivo performance of class II compounds and their formulations. Methods, Dissolution behavior of two class I drugs, i.e. acetaminophen and metoprolol, and of three class II drugs, i.e. danazol, mefenamic acid and ketoconazole, was studied with USP Apparatus 2 in water, SGF, milk, Simulated Intestinal Fluid without pancreatin (SIFsp) and in two media simulating the small intestinal contents in the fed (FeSSIF) and fasted (FaSSIF) states, respectively. Results. Class I powders dissolved rapidly in all media tested. Acetaminophen dissolution in milk was slow from one tablet formulation, in all other cases dissolution was more than 85% complete in 15 minutes. The dissolution rate of metoprolol was shown to be dependent on formulation and manufacturing method, and one of the three tablet formulations did not meet compendial specifications (80%/30 minutes). Dissolution behavior of class II drugs was greatly affected by choice of medium. Dissolution from a capsule formulation of danazol proved to be dependent on the concentration of solubilizing agents, with a the 30-fold increase in percentage dissolved within 90 minutes upon changing from aqueous media without surfactants to FaSSIF. Use of FeSSIF or milk as the dissolution medium resulted in an even greater increase in percentage dissolved, 100 and 180-fold respectively. Dissolution of the weak acid mefenamic acid from a capsule formulation is dependent on both pH and bile salt concentration, which leads to an offset between increased bile salt concentration and lower pH in the fed state compared to the fasted state medium. The weak base ketoconazole showed complete dissolution from a tablet formulation in Simulated Gastric Fluid without pepsin (SGF(sp)) within 30 minutes, 70% dissolution in 2 hours under fed state simulated upper jejunal conditions but only 6% dissolution in 2 hours under fasted state conditions. Conclusions. As predicted, dissolution of class II drugs proved to be in general much more dependent on the medium than class I drugs. With the array of compendial and physiological media available, it should be possible to design a suitable set of tests to predict the in vivo dissolution of both class I and II drugs from immediate release formulations.
引用
收藏
页码:698 / 705
页数:8
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] Evaluation of Various Dissolution Media for Predicting In Vivo Performance of Class I and II Drugs
    E. Galia
    E. Nicolaides
    D. Hörter
    R. Löbenberg
    C. Reppas
    J. B. Dressman
    Pharmaceutical Research, 1998, 15 : 698 - 705
  • [2] Insight into the Development of Dissolution Media for BCS Class II Drugs: A Review from Quality Control and Prediction of In Vivo Performance Perspectives
    Wu, Chunnuan
    Liu, Yan
    He, Zhonggui
    Sun, Jin
    CURRENT DRUG DELIVERY, 2016, 13 (07) : 1004 - 1020
  • [3] Use of conventional surfactant media as surrogates for FaSSIF in simulating in vivo dissolution of BCS class II drugs
    Lehto, Paula
    Kortejarvi, Hanna
    Liimatainen, Anni
    Ojala, Krista
    Kangas, Heli
    Hirvonen, Jouni
    Tanninen, Veli Pekka
    Peltonen, Leena
    EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF PHARMACEUTICS AND BIOPHARMACEUTICS, 2011, 78 (03) : 531 - 538
  • [4] Evaluation of Dissolution Media Containing a Novel Synthetic Surfactant by In Vitro Testing of BCS Class II Drugs
    Jogia, Hitesh
    Mehta, Tushar
    Patel, Madhabhai
    DISSOLUTION TECHNOLOGIES, 2009, 16 (03): : 14 - 19
  • [5] Evaluation of a pH-Gradient Biphasic Dissolution Test for Predicting In Vivo Performance of Weakly Basic Drugs
    Deng, Jia
    Shi, Shengying
    Fan, Xiaowei
    Guo, Lixia
    Ji, Jingou
    DISSOLUTION TECHNOLOGIES, 2024, 31 (01): : 32 - 38
  • [6] Comparison of statistical analysis and Bayesian networks in the evaluation of dissolution performance of BCS class II model drugs
    Wilson, WI
    Peng, Y
    Augsburger, LL
    JOURNAL OF PHARMACEUTICAL SCIENCES, 2005, 94 (12) : 2764 - 2776
  • [7] Evaluation of in vivo dissolution behavior and GI transit of griseofulvin, a BCS class II drug
    Fujioka, Yoshitsugu
    Metsugi, Yukiko
    Ogawara, Ken-ichi
    Higaki, Kazutaka
    Kimura, Toshikiro
    INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF PHARMACEUTICS, 2008, 352 (1-2) : 36 - 43
  • [8] IDENTIFY BIOPREDICTIVE DISSOLUTION FOR PREDICTING IN VIVO PERFORMANCE OF A BCS II DRUG PRODUCT UNDER FED CONDITION
    Du, P.
    Fang, L.
    Zhao, L.
    Wu, F.
    CLINICAL PHARMACOLOGY & THERAPEUTICS, 2024, 115 : S105 - S105
  • [9] The in vivo predictive dissolution for immediate release dosage of donepezil and danazol, BCS class IIc drugs, with the GIS and the USP II with biphasic dissolution apparatus
    Tsume, Yasuhiro
    Igawa, Naoto
    Drelich, Adam J.
    Ruan, Hao
    Amidon, Gregory E.
    Amidon, Gordon L.
    JOURNAL OF DRUG DELIVERY SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY, 2020, 56
  • [10] The Use of Biorelevant Dissolution Media to Forecast the In Vivo Performance of a Drug
    Sandra Klein
    The AAPS Journal, 2010, 12 : 397 - 406