Utilizing Solid-State Techniques and Accelerated Conditions to Understand Particle Size Instability in Inhaled Drug Substances

Micronization by air jet milling is often used to produce drug substance particles of acceptable respirable size for use in dry powder inhaler formulations. The energy from this process often induces surface disordered sites on the micronized particles with potential consequences for the long-term s...

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Bibliographic Details
Published inJournal of pharmaceutical sciences Vol. 110; no. 8; pp. 3037 - 3046
Main Authors Dobson, Daniel P., Yanez, Evelyn, Lubach, Joseph W., Stumpf, Andreas, Pellet, Jackson, Tso, Jerry
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published United States Elsevier Inc 01.08.2021
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Summary:Micronization by air jet milling is often used to produce drug substance particles of acceptable respirable size for use in dry powder inhaler formulations. The energy from this process often induces surface disordered sites on the micronized particles with potential consequences for the long-term stability of the drug substance. In this study, two lots of the same drug substance were qualitatively determined to have different extents of disordered surface using dynamic vapor sorption and scanning electron microscopy. These differences led to observable divergences in particle size and morphology between lots of drug substances on long-term and accelerated stability. The studies investigate the contribution of temperature and humidity, morphology prior to milling, and stability behavior post-micronization. The results highlight the importance of controlling the crystallization solvents upstream of micronization and their contribution to a material's susceptibility to milling-induced disorder on long-term physical stability. Furthermore, this work proposes an accelerated technique useful in predicting stability behavior of micronized drug substances in days rather than months, especially in cases where small differences cannot be detected by standard solid-state techniques.
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ISSN:0022-3549
1520-6017
DOI:10.1016/j.xphs.2021.05.006