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Electro-Hydrodynamic Drop-on-Demand Printing of Aqueous Suspensions of Drug Nanoparticles

We demonstrate the ability to fabricate dosage forms of a poorly water-soluble drug by using wet stirred media milling of a drug powder to produce an aqueous suspension of nanoparticles and then print it onto a porous biocompatible film. Contrary to conventional printing technologies, a deposited ma...

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Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Elele, Ezinwa, Shen, Yueyang, Boppana, Rajyalakshmi, Afolabi, Afolawemi, Bilgili, Ecevit, Khusid, Boris
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2020
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7693662/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33138033
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/pharmaceutics12111034
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author Elele, Ezinwa
Shen, Yueyang
Boppana, Rajyalakshmi
Afolabi, Afolawemi
Bilgili, Ecevit
Khusid, Boris
author_facet Elele, Ezinwa
Shen, Yueyang
Boppana, Rajyalakshmi
Afolabi, Afolawemi
Bilgili, Ecevit
Khusid, Boris
author_sort Elele, Ezinwa
collection PubMed
description We demonstrate the ability to fabricate dosage forms of a poorly water-soluble drug by using wet stirred media milling of a drug powder to produce an aqueous suspension of nanoparticles and then print it onto a porous biocompatible film. Contrary to conventional printing technologies, a deposited material is pulled out from the nozzle. This feature enables printing highly viscous materials with a precise control over the printed volume. Drug (griseofulvin) nanosuspensions prepared by wet media milling were printed onto porous hydroxypropyl methylcellulose films prepared by freeze-drying. The drug particles retained crystallinity and polymorphic form in the course of milling and printing. The versatility of this technique was demonstrated by printing the same amount of nanoparticles onto a film with droplets of different sizes. The mean drug content (0.19–3.80 mg) in the printed films was predicted by the number of droplets (5–100) and droplet volume (0.2–1.0 µL) (R(2) = 0.9994, p-value < 10(−4)). Our results also suggest that for any targeted drug content, the number-volume of droplets could be modulated to achieve acceptable drug content uniformity. Analysis of the model-independent difference and similarity factors showed consistency of drug release profiles from films with a printed suspension. Zero-order kinetics described the griseofulvin release rate from 1.8% up to 82%. Overall, this study has successfully demonstrated that the electro-hydrodynamic drop-on-demand printing of an aqueous drug nanosuspension enables accurate and controllable drug dosing in porous polymer films, which exhibited acceptable content uniformity and reproducible drug release.
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spelling pubmed-76936622020-11-28 Electro-Hydrodynamic Drop-on-Demand Printing of Aqueous Suspensions of Drug Nanoparticles Elele, Ezinwa Shen, Yueyang Boppana, Rajyalakshmi Afolabi, Afolawemi Bilgili, Ecevit Khusid, Boris Pharmaceutics Article We demonstrate the ability to fabricate dosage forms of a poorly water-soluble drug by using wet stirred media milling of a drug powder to produce an aqueous suspension of nanoparticles and then print it onto a porous biocompatible film. Contrary to conventional printing technologies, a deposited material is pulled out from the nozzle. This feature enables printing highly viscous materials with a precise control over the printed volume. Drug (griseofulvin) nanosuspensions prepared by wet media milling were printed onto porous hydroxypropyl methylcellulose films prepared by freeze-drying. The drug particles retained crystallinity and polymorphic form in the course of milling and printing. The versatility of this technique was demonstrated by printing the same amount of nanoparticles onto a film with droplets of different sizes. The mean drug content (0.19–3.80 mg) in the printed films was predicted by the number of droplets (5–100) and droplet volume (0.2–1.0 µL) (R(2) = 0.9994, p-value < 10(−4)). Our results also suggest that for any targeted drug content, the number-volume of droplets could be modulated to achieve acceptable drug content uniformity. Analysis of the model-independent difference and similarity factors showed consistency of drug release profiles from films with a printed suspension. Zero-order kinetics described the griseofulvin release rate from 1.8% up to 82%. Overall, this study has successfully demonstrated that the electro-hydrodynamic drop-on-demand printing of an aqueous drug nanosuspension enables accurate and controllable drug dosing in porous polymer films, which exhibited acceptable content uniformity and reproducible drug release. MDPI 2020-10-29 /pmc/articles/PMC7693662/ /pubmed/33138033 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/pharmaceutics12111034 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
Elele, Ezinwa
Shen, Yueyang
Boppana, Rajyalakshmi
Afolabi, Afolawemi
Bilgili, Ecevit
Khusid, Boris
Electro-Hydrodynamic Drop-on-Demand Printing of Aqueous Suspensions of Drug Nanoparticles
title Electro-Hydrodynamic Drop-on-Demand Printing of Aqueous Suspensions of Drug Nanoparticles
title_full Electro-Hydrodynamic Drop-on-Demand Printing of Aqueous Suspensions of Drug Nanoparticles
title_fullStr Electro-Hydrodynamic Drop-on-Demand Printing of Aqueous Suspensions of Drug Nanoparticles
title_full_unstemmed Electro-Hydrodynamic Drop-on-Demand Printing of Aqueous Suspensions of Drug Nanoparticles
title_short Electro-Hydrodynamic Drop-on-Demand Printing of Aqueous Suspensions of Drug Nanoparticles
title_sort electro-hydrodynamic drop-on-demand printing of aqueous suspensions of drug nanoparticles
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7693662/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33138033
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/pharmaceutics12111034
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