Issue 1, 2025

Controlling the solid-state and particle properties of a fixed-dose combination co-amorphous system by spray drying

Abstract

Controlling the solid-state stability of co-amorphous drug delivery systems has been an ongoing challenge in the pharmaceutical field to date. The main route to stabilise co-amorphous systems is to increase excipient load either in the co-amorphous formulation or via an additional excipient, creating a ternary amorphous system. Increasing excipient load in a formulation can have disadvantages such as producing large oral dosage forms. In this work, the impact of spray drying process parameters on the formation and short-term stability of a drug–drug co-amorphous mixture in the absence of any excipients is investigated. A 9-point design of experiments (DoE) was conducted to assess the impact of atomising gas flowrate and feed flowrate on the co-amorphous formation and stability. It was found that when the outlet temperature was fixed at 50 °C, the atomising gas flowrate had a more significant effect on the physical stability of the co-amorphous mixture than the feed flowrate. Monitoring the stability of formulations at accelerated stability conditions (40 °C per 75% relative humidity) showed that the co-amorphous systems produced at higher atomising gas flowrates, with smaller droplet sizes and subsequent particle sizes, exhibited a higher stability than those produced at lower atomising gas flowrates. Co-amorphous systems produced at the higher atomising gas flowrates remained stable for the 3-month stability testing period demonstrating that the co-amorphous physical stability can be controlled by optimising the spray drying process. The results presented in this study have significant implications for producing co-amorphous drug delivery systems with a high physical stability without the addition of excipients by spray drying.

Graphical abstract: Controlling the solid-state and particle properties of a fixed-dose combination co-amorphous system by spray drying

Supplementary files

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
06 Sep 2024
Accepted
19 Nov 2024
First published
20 Nov 2024
This article is Open Access
Creative Commons BY-NC license

RSC Pharm., 2025,2, 102-113

Controlling the solid-state and particle properties of a fixed-dose combination co-amorphous system by spray drying

A. Parkes, A. Ziaee and E. O'Reilly, RSC Pharm., 2025, 2, 102 DOI: 10.1039/D4PM00257A

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