AI Article Synopsis

  • Degradation rates of solid-state drug products increase as the drug load decreases, with a proposed model linking degradation to surface area ratios.
  • This model indicates that less drug load results in a greater percentage of the drug being in contact with excipients, which accelerates degradation.
  • The analysis shows that temperature and humidity have minimal impact on the relationship between degradation rate and drug load, suggesting that drug load mainly influences the pre-exponential factor in the Arrhenius equation.

Article Abstract

Degradation rates of solid-state drug products generally increase as the drug load decreases. A model for quantifying this effect based on surface area ratios is proposed here. This model relates the degradation rate to an estimate of the proportion of drug substance in contact with the excipient, and that the drug substance in contact with excipients degrades more quickly. Degradation data from previously published case studies and from 5 new case studies were found to be consistent with our proposed model; our model performed better than similar previously published models. It was also found that the relationship between degradation rate and drug load is largely independent of the temperature and humidity conditions, suggesting that drug load solely affects the pre-exponential factor of the Arrhenius equation and does not significantly affect the activation energy of the degradation process. A second method for calculating the proportion of the drug substance surface in contact with the excipient surface is presented in the Supplementary Material. Fundamentally, the 2 methods are very similar and provide almost identical fits to the experimental data.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.xphs.2018.12.003DOI Listing

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