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Application of the Gastrointestinal Simulator (GIS) Coupled with In Silico Modeling to Measure the Impact of Coca-Cola(®) on the Luminal and Systemic Behavior of Loratadine (BCS Class 2b)

In the present work, we explored if Coca-Cola(®) had a beneficial impact on the systemic outcome of the weakly basic drug loratadine (Wal-itin(®), immediate-release formulation, 10 mg, generic drug product). To map the contribution of underlying physiological variables that may positively impact the...

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Autores principales: Hens, Bart, Bermejo, Marival, Cristofoletti, Rodrigo, Amidon, Gregory E., Amidon, Gordon L.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2020
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7355706/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/32570975
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/pharmaceutics12060566
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author Hens, Bart
Bermejo, Marival
Cristofoletti, Rodrigo
Amidon, Gregory E.
Amidon, Gordon L.
author_facet Hens, Bart
Bermejo, Marival
Cristofoletti, Rodrigo
Amidon, Gregory E.
Amidon, Gordon L.
author_sort Hens, Bart
collection PubMed
description In the present work, we explored if Coca-Cola(®) had a beneficial impact on the systemic outcome of the weakly basic drug loratadine (Wal-itin(®), immediate-release formulation, 10 mg, generic drug product). To map the contribution of underlying physiological variables that may positively impact the intestinal absorption of loratadine, a multi-compartmental and dynamic dissolution device was built, namely the Gastrointestinal Simulator (GIS). The luminal behavior of one immediate-release (IR) tablet of 10 mg of loratadine was tested under four different fasted state test conditions in the GIS: (i) with 250 mL of water and applying a predetermined gastric half-life (t(1/2,G)) of 15 min; (ii) with 250 mL of water and applying a t(1/2,G) of 30 min; (iii) with 250 mL of Coca-Cola(®) and a t(1/2,G) of 15 min; (iv) with 250 mL of Coca-Cola(®) and a t(1/2,G) of 30 min. After initiating the experiments, solution concentrations and solubility were measured in the withdrawn samples, and pH was monitored. To address the impact of the present CO(2) in Coca-Cola(®) on the disintegration time of the tablet, additional disintegration experiments were performed in a single-vessel applying tap water and sparkling water as dissolution media. These experiments demonstrated the faster disintegration of the tablet in the presence of sparkling water, as the present CO(2) facilitates the release of the drug. The buffer capacity of Coca-Cola(®) in the presence of FaSSGF was 4-fold higher than the buffer capacity of tap water in the presence of FaSSGF. After performing the in vitro experiments, the obtained results were used as input for a two-compartmental pharmacokinetic (PK) modeling approach to predict the systemic concentrations. These simulations pointed out that (i) the present CO(2) in Coca-Cola(®) is responsible for the enhancement in drug release and dissolution and that (ii) a delay in gastric emptying rate will sustain the supersaturated concentrations of loratadine in the intestinal regions of the GI tract, resulting in an enhanced driving force for intestinal absorption. Therefore, co-administration of loratadine with Coca-Cola(®) will highly likely result in an increased systemic exposure compared to co-administration of loratadine with tap water. The mechanistic insights that were obtained from this work will serve as a scientific basis to evaluate the impact of Coca-Cola(®) on the systemic exposure of weakly basic drugs for patients on acid-reducing agents in future work.
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spelling pubmed-73557062020-07-23 Application of the Gastrointestinal Simulator (GIS) Coupled with In Silico Modeling to Measure the Impact of Coca-Cola(®) on the Luminal and Systemic Behavior of Loratadine (BCS Class 2b) Hens, Bart Bermejo, Marival Cristofoletti, Rodrigo Amidon, Gregory E. Amidon, Gordon L. Pharmaceutics Article In the present work, we explored if Coca-Cola(®) had a beneficial impact on the systemic outcome of the weakly basic drug loratadine (Wal-itin(®), immediate-release formulation, 10 mg, generic drug product). To map the contribution of underlying physiological variables that may positively impact the intestinal absorption of loratadine, a multi-compartmental and dynamic dissolution device was built, namely the Gastrointestinal Simulator (GIS). The luminal behavior of one immediate-release (IR) tablet of 10 mg of loratadine was tested under four different fasted state test conditions in the GIS: (i) with 250 mL of water and applying a predetermined gastric half-life (t(1/2,G)) of 15 min; (ii) with 250 mL of water and applying a t(1/2,G) of 30 min; (iii) with 250 mL of Coca-Cola(®) and a t(1/2,G) of 15 min; (iv) with 250 mL of Coca-Cola(®) and a t(1/2,G) of 30 min. After initiating the experiments, solution concentrations and solubility were measured in the withdrawn samples, and pH was monitored. To address the impact of the present CO(2) in Coca-Cola(®) on the disintegration time of the tablet, additional disintegration experiments were performed in a single-vessel applying tap water and sparkling water as dissolution media. These experiments demonstrated the faster disintegration of the tablet in the presence of sparkling water, as the present CO(2) facilitates the release of the drug. The buffer capacity of Coca-Cola(®) in the presence of FaSSGF was 4-fold higher than the buffer capacity of tap water in the presence of FaSSGF. After performing the in vitro experiments, the obtained results were used as input for a two-compartmental pharmacokinetic (PK) modeling approach to predict the systemic concentrations. These simulations pointed out that (i) the present CO(2) in Coca-Cola(®) is responsible for the enhancement in drug release and dissolution and that (ii) a delay in gastric emptying rate will sustain the supersaturated concentrations of loratadine in the intestinal regions of the GI tract, resulting in an enhanced driving force for intestinal absorption. Therefore, co-administration of loratadine with Coca-Cola(®) will highly likely result in an increased systemic exposure compared to co-administration of loratadine with tap water. The mechanistic insights that were obtained from this work will serve as a scientific basis to evaluate the impact of Coca-Cola(®) on the systemic exposure of weakly basic drugs for patients on acid-reducing agents in future work. MDPI 2020-06-18 /pmc/articles/PMC7355706/ /pubmed/32570975 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/pharmaceutics12060566 Text en © 2020 by the authors. Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Hens, Bart
Bermejo, Marival
Cristofoletti, Rodrigo
Amidon, Gregory E.
Amidon, Gordon L.
Application of the Gastrointestinal Simulator (GIS) Coupled with In Silico Modeling to Measure the Impact of Coca-Cola(®) on the Luminal and Systemic Behavior of Loratadine (BCS Class 2b)
title Application of the Gastrointestinal Simulator (GIS) Coupled with In Silico Modeling to Measure the Impact of Coca-Cola(®) on the Luminal and Systemic Behavior of Loratadine (BCS Class 2b)
title_full Application of the Gastrointestinal Simulator (GIS) Coupled with In Silico Modeling to Measure the Impact of Coca-Cola(®) on the Luminal and Systemic Behavior of Loratadine (BCS Class 2b)
title_fullStr Application of the Gastrointestinal Simulator (GIS) Coupled with In Silico Modeling to Measure the Impact of Coca-Cola(®) on the Luminal and Systemic Behavior of Loratadine (BCS Class 2b)
title_full_unstemmed Application of the Gastrointestinal Simulator (GIS) Coupled with In Silico Modeling to Measure the Impact of Coca-Cola(®) on the Luminal and Systemic Behavior of Loratadine (BCS Class 2b)
title_short Application of the Gastrointestinal Simulator (GIS) Coupled with In Silico Modeling to Measure the Impact of Coca-Cola(®) on the Luminal and Systemic Behavior of Loratadine (BCS Class 2b)
title_sort application of the gastrointestinal simulator (gis) coupled with in silico modeling to measure the impact of coca-cola(®) on the luminal and systemic behavior of loratadine (bcs class 2b)
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7355706/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/32570975
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/pharmaceutics12060566
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