The aim of this study was to investigate under in vitro conditions the influence of ethanol on acid resistance of four commercially-available enteric polymers (Acryl-EZE, AQOAT, Hypromellose phthalate, and Sureteric). For this purpose, custom-prepared paracetamol tablets were coated with the enteric polymers and tested for release using the buffer-addition method. Ten different hydro-ethanolic media were used in the acid stage corresponding to five levels of ethanol (0, 5, 10, 20, and 40% v/v) in two acidic solutions representing low and high gastric pH (0.1 N HCl pH 1.2, L, and phosphate buffer pH 4.0, H, respectively). The coats were found to resist both types of acidic solution with ethanol percentages up to 10% leading to release profiles that conformed with the pharmacopeial requirements (<10% release after 2 h in acid stage) except for Acryl-EZE, which showed a premature release in H media. At the higher ethanol levels (20 and 40%), premature release associated with increased acid uptake by coated tablets was noticed for all polymers and more remarkably in H media. ANOVA tests revealed significant effects of polymer type, acidic solution type, and ethanol level on the onset and extent of premature release.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/10837450.2017.1412461 | DOI Listing |
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