Bicarbonate buffer dissolution test with gentle mechanistic stress for bioequivalence prediction of enteric-coated pellet formulations

This study aimed to develop a dissolution test that can predict the bioequivalence (BE) of enteric-coated pellet formulations. The original duloxetine hydrochloride capsule (reference formulation (RF); Cymbalta® 30 mg capsule) and four generic test formulations (two capsules (CP) and two orally disi...

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Bibliographic Details
Published inEuropean journal of pharmaceutical sciences Vol. 192; p. 106622
Main Authors Ikuta, Shotaro, Nakagawa, Hidetoshi, Kai, Toshiya, Sugano, Kiyohiko
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Netherlands Elsevier B.V 01.01.2024
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Summary:This study aimed to develop a dissolution test that can predict the bioequivalence (BE) of enteric-coated pellet formulations. The original duloxetine hydrochloride capsule (reference formulation (RF); Cymbalta® 30 mg capsule) and four generic test formulations (two capsules (CP) and two orally disintegrating tablets (OD)) were used as model formulations. Clinical BE studies were conducted on 24–47 healthy male subjects under fasting conditions. Dissolution tests were performed using a compendial paddle method (PD) (paddle speed: 50 rpm) and a flow-through cell method (FTC) (flow rate: 4 mL/min). For a further test, cotton balls were added to the vessel to apply gentle mechanistic stress to the formulations, and paddle speed was reduced to 10 rpm (paddle with cotton ball method (PDCB)).All the dissolution tests were conducted with 0.01 M HCl (pH 2.0) for 0.5 h followed by 10 mM bicarbonate buffer solutions (pH 6.5) for 4 h. One each of the two CP and two OD showed BE with RF. PDCB was able to discriminate between BE and non-BE formulations, while this was not possible with PD and FTC. In PDCB, the cotton balls intermittently moved the pellets near the vessel bottom. PDCB is useful for predicting BE during formulation development. [Display omitted]
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ISSN:0928-0987
1879-0720
1879-0720
DOI:10.1016/j.ejps.2023.106622