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Formulation Pre-screening of Inhalation Powders Using Computational Atom–Atom Systematic Search Method

Ramachandran, Vasuki; Murnane, Darragh; Hammond, Robert B.; Pickering, Jonathan; Roberts, Kevin J.; Soufian, Majeed; Forbes, Ben; Jaffari, Sara; Martin, Gary P.; Collins, Elizabeth; Pencheva, Klimentina

Authors

Vasuki Ramachandran

Darragh Murnane

Robert B. Hammond

Jonathan Pickering

Kevin J. Roberts

Majeed Soufian

Ben Forbes

Sara Jaffari

Gary P. Martin

Elizabeth Collins

Klimentina Pencheva



Abstract

The synthonic modeling approach provides a molecule-centered understanding of the surface properties of crystals. It has been applied extensively to understand crystallization processes. This study aimed to investigate the functional relevance of synthonic modeling to the formulation of inhalation powders by assessing cohesivity of three active pharmaceutical ingredients (APIs, fluticasone propionate (FP), budesonide (Bud), and salbutamol base (SB)) and the commonly used excipient, α-lactose monohydrate (LMH). It is found that FP (−11.5 kcal/mol) has a higher cohesive strength than Bud (−9.9 kcal/mol) or SB (−7.8 kcal/mol). The prediction correlated directly to cohesive strength measurements using laser diffraction, where the airflow pressure required for complete dispersion (CPP) was 3.5, 2.0, and 1.0 bar for FP, Bud, and SB, respectively. The highest cohesive strength was predicted for LMH (−15.9 kcal/mol), which did not correlate with the CPP value of 2.0 bar (i.e., ranking lower than FP). High FP–LMH adhesive forces (−11.7 kcal/mol) were predicted. However, aerosolization studies revealed that the FP–LMH blends consisted of agglomerated FP particles with a large median diameter (∼4–5 μm) that were not disrupted by LMH. Modeling of the crystal and surface chemistry of LMH identified high electrostatic and H-bond components of its cohesive energy due to the presence of water and hydroxyl groups in lactose, unlike the APIs. A direct comparison of the predicted and measured cohesive balance of LMH with APIs will require a more in-depth understanding of highly hydrogen-bonded systems with respect to the synthonic engineering modeling tool, as well as the influence of agglomerate structure on surface–surface contact geometry. Overall, this research has demonstrated the possible application and relevance of synthonic engineering tools for rapid pre-screening in drug formulation and design.

Citation

Ramachandran, V., Murnane, D., Hammond, R. B., Pickering, J., Roberts, K. J., Soufian, M., …Pencheva, K. (2015). Formulation Pre-screening of Inhalation Powders Using Computational Atom–Atom Systematic Search Method. Molecular Pharmaceutics, 12(1), 18-33. https://doi.org/10.1021/mp500335w

Journal Article Type Article
Acceptance Date Jul 31, 2014
Online Publication Date Nov 24, 2014
Publication Date Jan 5, 2015
Deposit Date May 8, 2017
Publicly Available Date May 10, 2017
Journal Molecular Pharmaceutics
Print ISSN 1543-8384
Electronic ISSN 1543-8392
Publisher American Chemical Society
Peer Reviewed Peer Reviewed
Volume 12
Issue 1
Pages 18-33
DOI https://doi.org/10.1021/mp500335w
Keywords budesonide; de-agglomeration; fluticasone propionate; in silico formulation design; inhalation drug delivery; inter-particle interaction; laser diffraction; molecular and synthonic modeling; powder dispersion analysis; salbutamol; α-lactose monohydrate
Public URL http://researchrepository.napier.ac.uk/Output/836208

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Formulation Pre-screening of Inhalation Powders Using Computational Atom−Atom Systematic Search Method (7.1 Mb)
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Publisher Licence URL
http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/

Copyright Statement
This is an open access article published under a Creative Commons Attribution (CC-BY) License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution and reproduction in any medium, provided the author and source are cited.





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