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Influence of Print Settings on the Critical Quality Attributes of Extrusion-Based 3D-Printed Caplets: A Quality-by-Design Approach

Extrusion-based 3D-printing is an easy-to-use, cheap manufacturing technique that could be used to produce tailored precision medicines. The technique has an almost unlimited versatility since a multitude of print parameters can easily be adapted. Unfortunately, little is known of the effect of thes...

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Autores principales: Henry, Silke, De Wever, Lotte, Vanhoorne, Valérie, De Beer, Thomas, Vervaet, Chris
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2021
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8708825/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34959349
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/pharmaceutics13122068
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author Henry, Silke
De Wever, Lotte
Vanhoorne, Valérie
De Beer, Thomas
Vervaet, Chris
author_facet Henry, Silke
De Wever, Lotte
Vanhoorne, Valérie
De Beer, Thomas
Vervaet, Chris
author_sort Henry, Silke
collection PubMed
description Extrusion-based 3D-printing is an easy-to-use, cheap manufacturing technique that could be used to produce tailored precision medicines. The technique has an almost unlimited versatility since a multitude of print parameters can easily be adapted. Unfortunately, little is known of the effect of these print parameters on the critical quality attributes of the resulting printlets. In this study, practical guidelines and means to adapt certain parameters in order to achieve the desired outcome (e.g., acceptable visual quality and flexible dosing) are stipulated for medical 3D-printing using a design-of-experiments approach. The current study aims at elucidating the effect of five print parameters (infill, overlap, number of shells, layer height and layer pattern) on the mechanical properties, dimensions, weight, porosity and dissolution characteristics of a fixed-size caplet consisting of Eudragit EPO (69.3%), Polyox WSR N10 (29.7%) and zolpidem hemitartrate (1%). In terms of the mechanical properties, 3D-printed caplets possessed anisotropy where the vertical compression strength and Brinell hardness exceeded the diametral strength. In general, all 3D-printed caplets possessed acceptable mechanical strength except for a small region of the knowledge space. Dimensional analysis revealed small, statistical significant differences between different runs, although the clinical relevance of this variation is likely negligible. The weight or dose of a caplet can be varied mainly using the infill and overlap and, to a lesser extent, via the layer height and number of shells. The impact on porosity was complicated as this was influenced by many factors and their interactions. Infill was the only statistically relevant factor influencing the dissolution rate of the current formulation. This study unravels the importance of the print parameter overlap, which is a regularly neglected parameter. We also discovered that small dose variations while maintaining the same dissolution profile were possible via modifying the overlap or number of shells. However, large dose variations without affecting the dissolution behaviour could only be accomplished by size modifications of the printlet.
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spelling pubmed-87088252021-12-25 Influence of Print Settings on the Critical Quality Attributes of Extrusion-Based 3D-Printed Caplets: A Quality-by-Design Approach Henry, Silke De Wever, Lotte Vanhoorne, Valérie De Beer, Thomas Vervaet, Chris Pharmaceutics Article Extrusion-based 3D-printing is an easy-to-use, cheap manufacturing technique that could be used to produce tailored precision medicines. The technique has an almost unlimited versatility since a multitude of print parameters can easily be adapted. Unfortunately, little is known of the effect of these print parameters on the critical quality attributes of the resulting printlets. In this study, practical guidelines and means to adapt certain parameters in order to achieve the desired outcome (e.g., acceptable visual quality and flexible dosing) are stipulated for medical 3D-printing using a design-of-experiments approach. The current study aims at elucidating the effect of five print parameters (infill, overlap, number of shells, layer height and layer pattern) on the mechanical properties, dimensions, weight, porosity and dissolution characteristics of a fixed-size caplet consisting of Eudragit EPO (69.3%), Polyox WSR N10 (29.7%) and zolpidem hemitartrate (1%). In terms of the mechanical properties, 3D-printed caplets possessed anisotropy where the vertical compression strength and Brinell hardness exceeded the diametral strength. In general, all 3D-printed caplets possessed acceptable mechanical strength except for a small region of the knowledge space. Dimensional analysis revealed small, statistical significant differences between different runs, although the clinical relevance of this variation is likely negligible. The weight or dose of a caplet can be varied mainly using the infill and overlap and, to a lesser extent, via the layer height and number of shells. The impact on porosity was complicated as this was influenced by many factors and their interactions. Infill was the only statistically relevant factor influencing the dissolution rate of the current formulation. This study unravels the importance of the print parameter overlap, which is a regularly neglected parameter. We also discovered that small dose variations while maintaining the same dissolution profile were possible via modifying the overlap or number of shells. However, large dose variations without affecting the dissolution behaviour could only be accomplished by size modifications of the printlet. MDPI 2021-12-03 /pmc/articles/PMC8708825/ /pubmed/34959349 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/pharmaceutics13122068 Text en © 2021 by the authors. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/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 (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Henry, Silke
De Wever, Lotte
Vanhoorne, Valérie
De Beer, Thomas
Vervaet, Chris
Influence of Print Settings on the Critical Quality Attributes of Extrusion-Based 3D-Printed Caplets: A Quality-by-Design Approach
title Influence of Print Settings on the Critical Quality Attributes of Extrusion-Based 3D-Printed Caplets: A Quality-by-Design Approach
title_full Influence of Print Settings on the Critical Quality Attributes of Extrusion-Based 3D-Printed Caplets: A Quality-by-Design Approach
title_fullStr Influence of Print Settings on the Critical Quality Attributes of Extrusion-Based 3D-Printed Caplets: A Quality-by-Design Approach
title_full_unstemmed Influence of Print Settings on the Critical Quality Attributes of Extrusion-Based 3D-Printed Caplets: A Quality-by-Design Approach
title_short Influence of Print Settings on the Critical Quality Attributes of Extrusion-Based 3D-Printed Caplets: A Quality-by-Design Approach
title_sort influence of print settings on the critical quality attributes of extrusion-based 3d-printed caplets: a quality-by-design approach
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8708825/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34959349
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/pharmaceutics13122068
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