Quality by design, applied to the development of a pharmaceutical drug, demands scientific methodologies, representing a source of information that will allow for a complete understanding the production process and the materials used for its manufacturing. Although the SeDeM system is a tool that enables a rational development of a product, result does not assure that an assessed material or mixture will be successful in terms of compression, hence, further research will be necessary on these features. The objective of this study was to assess and compare two grades of metformin hydrochloride elaboration: crystalline and direct compression using PXRD, the SeDeM expert system, the Heckel and Ryshkewitch-Duckworth models, as well as process control tools such as control charts and process capability indices to characterize and predict the performance of the materials in a direct compression process. The assessment identified that in spite of dealing with two different technical grades of a material with specific critical quality attributes for each one, PXRD analysis showed we dealt with the same crystalline structure, while the SeDeM system profiles obtained have very close values, and the main differences in materials were observed when subjecting them to conditions that simulate a compaction process with the Ryshkewitch-Duckworth model, in which a 46-times higher mechanical resistance was observed in the direct compression material compared with the crystalline one. The statistical control analysis revealed that only the direct compression material could be used to elaborate tablets whose weight variation was always maintained within the specification and control limits.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/03639045.2021.1892741 | DOI Listing |
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