Pharmaceutics - Hu Exam
passive diffusion
-%absorption is dose dependent -pH changes permeability -permeability increases with partition coefficient -molecular size restriction -favors lipophilic drug
Encapsulated Dissolution Drugs
-Ornade Spansules (phenylpropanolamine/chlorpheniramine) -contac 12-hour capsule (phenylpropanolamine/chlorpheniramine/others) -chlor-trimeton Repetabs (chlorpheniramine) -diamox sequels (acetazolamide) (lollipop)
V=PSC; *active transport*
-P is dependent on C -uptake transporter will impact absorption rate constant and Cmax and Tmax -when uptake transporter saturated, AUC will increase with dose but less than proportionally (non-linear MM kinetics)
enzymes
-break down nutrients -prevent entry of undesirable substances from entery our system intact
Osmotic shell
-cannot swell or dissolve -controls release rate; reproducible
chemical stability
-chemical changes in medication that change the composition (aspirin turns yellow if exposed to moisture)
enteric coating
-dissolve in intestine, not stomach -decrease stomach irritation -delayed release onset (less reliable) -increase stability of acid labile compounds (would otherwise become inactive in stomach acid)
osmotically controlled systems characteristics
-driven by osmotic pressure difference -water is the diffusing species which is easier to control than drug -drug independent release rate -constant release profile possible -size of hole is critical -laser drill is capital intesnsive -more stringent on coating requirements -dose dumping possible (could be dangerous to pt)
burst effect
-drug has been stored for an extended period -all of drug comes out as soon as drug is in water/liquid -diffusion/matrix system
disintegrant function
-ensure tablets rapidly break into smaller fragments when in contact with water (dissolution) -types: 1) facilitate water uptake (surfactants) 2) rupture the tablets (starch-particle/particle repulsion?, cellulose) 3) effervescent (not used in tablets to be swallowed) -expand in volume to break up tablet
Binder function
-ensure that tablets and granules can be formed with required mechanical strength types: 1) dry powder (added prior to wet granulation process) 2) solution (used in wet granulation process) 3) some binders added right before tabletting process that do not require liquid
time lag
-freshly made diffusion/matrix system -drug does not rush out
Reservoir Device
-has a rate controlling membrane - polymer -drug diffuses out of membrane -constant release rate possible -high cost to make -dose dumping possible -temperature dependent (don't leave pills in car) dm/dt=K -rate affected by the thickness of the reservoir membrane and properties of the membrane materials
Matrix device
-has polymer matrix -drug dissolves out of insoluble web matrix
digestive organs
-have their own rhythm and physiological characteristics that may be changed by diseases or drugs
efflux transporter
-higher dose = higher % of absorption -pH and PC probably not significant -molecular size restriction -structural size restriction -can be saturated
Excipients for capsules
-inactive ingredients that do not diminish the pharmacological activities of the active species -maintain appearance (color, capsule shell, sealant) -protect the active species (antioxidant, coating) -disguise the unpleasant taste/smell (sealants) -change the dissolution rates of active species (coating) -manufacturing (diluents, lubricants, glidant)
Filler function
-increase the bulk volume so the final product has proper volume for patient handling -inert, compatible, non-hydroscopic, soluble, cheap, compactable, tasteful(?)
excipients for tablets
-maintaining the appearance (color, consistency) -protecting the active species (antioxidants) -disguising the unpleasant taste/smell (sugar, flavoring agents) -changing the dissolution rates of active species (coating, matrix) -manufacturing (diluents, lubricants, glidant)
P-Glycoprotein
-most common efflux transporter -cloned by Victor Ling of U of Toronto 1976 -pump waste into lumen from cell
PepT1
-most important uptake transporter in gut for drug absorption -transport peptides -12 transmembrane domains
transporters
-only functional on live cells -they need energy -rely on organized cellular structures -impact drug exposure (present in all disposition organs) -membrane proteins with 12 transmembrane domain -saturable -inhibitable -follow non-linear MM kinetics
bioprecursor prodrug
-prodrug must undergo oxidation/reduction to become active
sustained release products
-reduce dosing frequency (improve compliance) -less side effects
uptake transporters
-take drugs into a cell, tissue and/or organ -transport endogenous molecules or nutrients -some are high affinity but low capacity (others opposite) -most are active and can concentrate substrates -isoforms may or may not have overlapping specificities -distribution of uptake transporter may dictate the cellular or organ concentration (exposure) of a substrate
coating
-to protect active ingredients -mask taste/smell -appearance -handling ease -special functions
how to make erosion/dissolution controlled sustained release
-use slowly soluble salt -coat dosage form with slowly dissolving materials -incorporate drug int solowly dissolving carrier -Noyes-Whitney Equation: dc/dt=(D/h)A(Cs-C) dc/dt = dissolution rate, D= diffusion coefficient A= surface area, Cs= solubility, C is concentration
S3P Rule
1) Stability - physical, chemical, microbial 2) Suitability - route, compliance 3) Solubility - rate and extent 4) Permeability - absorptive, secretory, stability, metabolic 5) Time profile
quality attributes of tablets
1) correct dose 2) consistent weight, size and appearance 3) expected and reproducible rate of drug release 4) biocompatible/safe 5) strength 6) chemical, physically, and microbiologically stable 7) invite compliance 8) safely packed
tablet compaction
1) granulation: wet granulating 2) direct compaction
enhancing permeability and absorption
1) increase lipophility -modify polar functional groups -add alkyl or aryl esters -increases bioavailability 2) carrier-mediated transport -peptide transporter -amino acid transporter
overcoming toxicity problems
1) site-selective prodrug activation - affects only the target tissue 2) physiological conditions of the target tissue can differ from conditions elsewhere -common in chemodrugs
3D printing
1) thin layer of powdered drug is spread 2) liquid dropped on to powder 3) particles selectively bound in a thin porous layer 4) process is repeated a specific number of times to add more layers based on the dosage
Tabletting process
1) weighing 2) mixing 3) granulation 4) tabletting 5) QA check 6) dissolution 7) coating 8) QC check
Osmotically controlled system design
1)core with drug 2)solution in a flexible bag characteristics: -driven by pressure difference -water is diffusing species which is easier to control (vs. drug) -drug independent release rate -constant release profile possible -size of hole is critical -laser drill is capital intesnsive -more stringent on the coating requirements -dose dumping
Motility and residence time
1. has preset rhythm 2. Contraction occur in more than 1 dimension 3. transit from stomach to intestine 4. depend on food intake amount and types 5. impacted by disease states and drugs -moves 1-2cm per minute ~5h in GI Tract *if you take a medication without food, it will take 1h to get out of stomach *drug must dissolve within residence time or it will be passed before it is absorbed
Superstructure of intestine
1. has villi and microvilli 2. has many types of cells 3. impacted by disease states and drugs 4. impacted by microbiome *chemotherapy drugs can have side effects in GI tract
Granulation Benefits
1. increase bulk density 2. improve flowability 3. improve homogeneity 4. improve comactability 5. ensure homogenous color 6. control dissolution rate
Mixing tablets via granulation
1. mixing 2. agglomeration (wet binder added here) 3. drying 4. milling 5. mixing (add in manufacturing aids here; dry binder added last) 6. tabletting
Direct Compaction
1. mixing (high shear mixer with filler) 2. mixing (double cone mixer with dry binder, other excipients) 3. tabletting
reasons drug may not reach minimum effective concentration
1st pass metabolism low absorption
mutual prodrug
2 drugs linked to each other -no promoiety
paracellular
Absorption pathway: -movement of materials between cells
Frances Kelsey
FDA scientist kept thalidomide off U.S. market for treating pregnancy-related data -safety first (FDA)
Reservoir Products
Nitro-bid (nitroglycerin) Nitrospan (nitroglycerin) Nico-400 nicotinic acid
V=PC(out)S-P(efflux)C(in)S *active transport*
P dependent on C -efflux transporter will impact absorption rate constant and Cmax -when efflux transporter is saturated, the AUC will increase more than proportionally with dose (non linear MM kinetics)
V=PSC; *passive diffusion*
P is independent of C V is dependent on C
Gordon L. Amidon
Pharmaceutical classification system -uses solubility and permeability -Classes I-IV
Matrix Products
Procan SR procainamide Fero-Gradumed ferrous sulfate Choledyl SA oxtryphylline
dissolution enhancer
forms a salt with the drug during dissolution increasing the dissolution rate
extended release
formulation in which drug is released over time
John Wagner
founding father of pharmacokinetics -Pharmacokinetics for the Pharmaceutical Scientist -time vs. concentration curve FDA bases all safety of products on -Genistein
wet/solution binders
gelatin, cellulose, cellulose derivatives, polyvinyl pyrrolidone, starch, sucrose, PEG
Erosion/dissolution controlled Sustained Release
hard (insoluble) center *lollipop* -inexpensive to make -easy to administer -difficult to control the actual release rate -cannot maintain constant release rate
regular capsules
hard gelatin soft gelatin
Transporter mediated uptake
higher dose = lower % absorption -pH and PC probably insignificant -molecular size restriction (absorption erratic of macromolecules) -structural restriction (erratic absorption of transporter-incompatible structures) -absorption competition by nutritional components
Matrix/diffusion controlled sustained release
hydrophobic core exterior membrane multiparticulate -homogenous dispersion of solid drug in a polymer mix -less expensive to make -can deliver high molecular weight product -cannot maintain constant release
disintegrating tablet
immediate delayed
glidant
improve the flowability of the powder or granules or both
filler examples
lactose, sucrose, glucose, mannitol, sorbitol, calcium phosphate, calcium carbonate, cellulose
sorbent
limited fluid sorbing in dry state
liver gut blood site specific (cancer cells)
location of conversion for prodrug to drug occur
cellular junctions
maintain healthy, normal epithelium -provide need for transporters
sugar coating
make it taste sweeter
film coating
mask taste (works better than sugar coating)
physical stability
no chips, crumbling etc -illegal to dispense
QA/QC tests
performed to assess physical, chemical and microbial stability of a product
P
permeability across the organ barrier
improving solubility
prodrugs that use phosphate esters (most common promoiety) -increase hydrophilicity
protecting from rapid metabolism and excretion
protect sensitive functional groups
effervescent
rapid drug action
subligual and buccal
rapid release without 1st pass metabolism
V
rate of absorption
antiadherent
reduce the adhesion btw the powder (granules) and the punch faces and thus prevent tablet sticking to the punches
osmotic pressure driven sustained release
semipermeable membrane with hole multidirectional
prodrugs can target a particular organ
site specific chemical modifies bio precursor drug to active drug (omeprazole- bypasses stomach, H+ in parietal cells modify it to active drug)
lozenges
slow release for local action sucking
Factors that affect s3p
solubility dissolution chemical stability pka crystal forms (physical) hygroscopic properties (physical stability) excipient compatibility and suitability
disintegrant examples
starch, cellulose, crosslinked polyvinyul pyrrolidone, sodium starch glycolate, sodium carboxymethyl cellulose
release rate (tablets)
subligual/buccal>rapid (IR)>susatained release (ER)>enteric coated *enteric could be released rapidly in the fasted state*
S
surface area of absorption organ
Bioavailability
the drug that has reached the blood
bioavailability (FDA)
the rate and extent to which the active ingredient or active moiety is absorbed from a drug product and becomes available at the site of action
Tablet QC and QA
uniformity of active ingredients *disintegration* -screened tubes mechanical strength *dissolution* -rotating blade -rotating basket
QA
weight appearance mechanical strength
Biological characteristics of target organs
determine the absorption area, permeability and dissolution rates of the drug substances
Absorption Pathways
diffusion facilitated transport active transport
tripartite
drug-linker-Promoiety -linker (ch2 is one)
Bipartite
drug-promoiety -most common -phosphate is a common promoiety
lubricant
ensures tablet formation and injection can occur with low friction between the solid and the die wall
chewable
facilitate disintegration ease of swallowing
types of tablet excipients
filler/diluent disintegrant solution binder dry binder glidant lubricant antiadherent color coating protective agents
matrix dissolution drugs
Dimetapp Extentabs (brompheniramine) mestinon timespans (pyridostigmine) tenuate dospan (diethylpropion) (hard core) dm/dt=k/t^(1/2) -rate affected by porosity, tortuosity and solubility of the drug in the matrix and diffusion coefficient
dry binders
cellulose, methyl cellulose, polyvinyl pyrrolidone, PEG
controlled release systems of capsules
coated granules coarse dispersion
C
concentration at the absorption organ
QC
content uniformity disintegration dissolution
matrix former
a polymer or lipid/ or a substance that forms a gel in contact with water - drug is dispersed in particulate form in the matrix solid hydrophobic materials at room and body temp wax matrix PEG HPMC
microbial stability
activity or resistance to microbial growth
absorption enhancer
additive that modulates the permeability of the intestine
improving formulation and administration enhancing permeability and absorption changing the distribution profile protecting from rapid metabolism and excretion
advantages of using a prodrug