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Amorphicity and Aerosolization of Soluplus-Based Inhalable Spray Dried Powders

Soluplus is a polymer that has been explored to prepare nanocomposites for pulmonary drug delivery and is non-toxic. However, its aerosolization attributes when spray-dried have not been investigated. Hence, this work aimed to investigate the aerosol performance of soluplus-based spray-dried powders...

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Autores principales: Adhikari, Bishal Raj, Das, Shyamal C.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9787865/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36559112
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/pharmaceutics14122618
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author Adhikari, Bishal Raj
Das, Shyamal C.
author_facet Adhikari, Bishal Raj
Das, Shyamal C.
author_sort Adhikari, Bishal Raj
collection PubMed
description Soluplus is a polymer that has been explored to prepare nanocomposites for pulmonary drug delivery and is non-toxic. However, its aerosolization attributes when spray-dried have not been investigated. Hence, this work aimed to investigate the aerosol performance of soluplus-based spray-dried powders. In addition, the potential use of leucine to improve the aerosolization of such particles was also investigated by including leucine at 10 or 20% w/w. 4% w/w salbutamol was used as a model drug in all the formulations primarily to aid quantification during aerosolization evaluation and for assessing the interaction between the drug and soluplus using infrared spectroscopy with the multivariate analysis approach of principal component analysis (PCA). Three formulations (4% salbutamol/96% soluplus, 4% salbutamol/86% soluplus/10% leucine, 4% salbutamol/76% soluplus/20% leucine) were prepared. The formulations were characterized in terms of solid-state, water content, particle size/morphology, and aerosolization. Similarly, two additional formulations (14% salbutamol/86% soluplus and 24% salbutamol/76% soluplus) were prepared to assess potential non-covalent interactions between salbutamol and soluplus. The formulations with only salbutamol and soluplus were amorphous, as evident from X-ray diffraction. Leucine was crystalline in the formulations. All the spray-dried formulations were irregular spheres with surface corrugation. The 96% soluplus powder showed an emitted fraction (EF) and fine particles fraction (FPF) of 91.9 and 49.8%, respectively. The inclusion of leucine at 10% did not increase the EF; however, an increase in FPF (69.7%) was achieved with 20% leucine. PCA of the infrared spectra suggested potential non-covalent interactions between salbutamol and soluplus. It hinted at the potential involvement of ketone groups of the excipient. This study concludes that soluplus-based spray-dried powder with or without leucine can potentially be utilized for pulmonary drug delivery. In addition, PCA can effectively be utilized in assessing interactions and overcoming limitations associated with visual assessment of the spectra of such formulations.
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spelling pubmed-97878652022-12-24 Amorphicity and Aerosolization of Soluplus-Based Inhalable Spray Dried Powders Adhikari, Bishal Raj Das, Shyamal C. Pharmaceutics Article Soluplus is a polymer that has been explored to prepare nanocomposites for pulmonary drug delivery and is non-toxic. However, its aerosolization attributes when spray-dried have not been investigated. Hence, this work aimed to investigate the aerosol performance of soluplus-based spray-dried powders. In addition, the potential use of leucine to improve the aerosolization of such particles was also investigated by including leucine at 10 or 20% w/w. 4% w/w salbutamol was used as a model drug in all the formulations primarily to aid quantification during aerosolization evaluation and for assessing the interaction between the drug and soluplus using infrared spectroscopy with the multivariate analysis approach of principal component analysis (PCA). Three formulations (4% salbutamol/96% soluplus, 4% salbutamol/86% soluplus/10% leucine, 4% salbutamol/76% soluplus/20% leucine) were prepared. The formulations were characterized in terms of solid-state, water content, particle size/morphology, and aerosolization. Similarly, two additional formulations (14% salbutamol/86% soluplus and 24% salbutamol/76% soluplus) were prepared to assess potential non-covalent interactions between salbutamol and soluplus. The formulations with only salbutamol and soluplus were amorphous, as evident from X-ray diffraction. Leucine was crystalline in the formulations. All the spray-dried formulations were irregular spheres with surface corrugation. The 96% soluplus powder showed an emitted fraction (EF) and fine particles fraction (FPF) of 91.9 and 49.8%, respectively. The inclusion of leucine at 10% did not increase the EF; however, an increase in FPF (69.7%) was achieved with 20% leucine. PCA of the infrared spectra suggested potential non-covalent interactions between salbutamol and soluplus. It hinted at the potential involvement of ketone groups of the excipient. This study concludes that soluplus-based spray-dried powder with or without leucine can potentially be utilized for pulmonary drug delivery. In addition, PCA can effectively be utilized in assessing interactions and overcoming limitations associated with visual assessment of the spectra of such formulations. MDPI 2022-11-27 /pmc/articles/PMC9787865/ /pubmed/36559112 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/pharmaceutics14122618 Text en © 2022 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
Adhikari, Bishal Raj
Das, Shyamal C.
Amorphicity and Aerosolization of Soluplus-Based Inhalable Spray Dried Powders
title Amorphicity and Aerosolization of Soluplus-Based Inhalable Spray Dried Powders
title_full Amorphicity and Aerosolization of Soluplus-Based Inhalable Spray Dried Powders
title_fullStr Amorphicity and Aerosolization of Soluplus-Based Inhalable Spray Dried Powders
title_full_unstemmed Amorphicity and Aerosolization of Soluplus-Based Inhalable Spray Dried Powders
title_short Amorphicity and Aerosolization of Soluplus-Based Inhalable Spray Dried Powders
title_sort amorphicity and aerosolization of soluplus-based inhalable spray dried powders
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9787865/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36559112
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/pharmaceutics14122618
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