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Spray drying lactose from organic solvent suspensions for aerosol delivery to the lungs
- Source :
- International journal of pharmaceutics. 591
- Publication Year :
- 2020
-
Abstract
- Lactose is widely used as an approved excipient for dry powder inhaler (DPI) products. Spray drying technique is a rapid method for converting a liquid feed into inhalable dried particles. However, spray-dried (SD) lactose powders produced from solutions are mostly amorphous and particularly unstable when exposed to moisture. In the present study, we explored the use of spray drying suspensions containing crystalline lactose particles in an organic solvent, and investigated the physicochemical properties of the resulting powders. The solution formulation was spray dried as a control. Two conditioned crystalline lactose samples were used for suspension formulations: Lactohale (LH) 300 lactose and jet-milled (JM) lactose micronized from LH300. The suspension formulations each contained 12 mg/ml suspended crystalline lactose particles (either LH300 or JM lactose) in isopropyl alcohol. The solution formulation contained 60 mg/ml lactose in water. The SD powders were stored under 25 °C/60% RH and 40 °C/75% RH for 3 months. The particulate properties and in vitro dispersion performance were examined at various time points. The SD lactose obtained from solution recrystallized and was no longer dispersible after 1-day storage at both storage conditions. The suspension SD JM lactose powder showed deterioration in the particulate properties and dispersibility over time, but more gradually. In contrast, the SD LH300 powder was stable, with its particulate properties and dispersion performance (FPF: ~12%) remaining the same after 3-months storage at 25 °C/60% RH. The SD LH300 stored at 40 °C/75% RH showed no change in particulate properties, but the FPF decreased over 3 months. Overall, SD lactose powders obtained from suspension demonstrated superior stability performance compared to SD lactose obtained from solution.
- Subjects :
- Pharmaceutical Science
Excipient
Lactose
02 engineering and technology
030226 pharmacology & pharmacy
Suspension (chemistry)
03 medical and health sciences
chemistry.chemical_compound
0302 clinical medicine
Suspensions
Administration, Inhalation
medicine
Particle Size
Lung
Aerosols
Chromatography
Moisture
Isopropyl alcohol
Dry Powder Inhalers
Spray Drying
021001 nanoscience & nanotechnology
Dry-powder inhaler
chemistry
Spray drying
Solvents
Powders
0210 nano-technology
Dispersion (chemistry)
medicine.drug
Subjects
Details
- ISSN :
- 18733476
- Volume :
- 591
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- International journal of pharmaceutics
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....4c48c1b5541a6c34e61db251c80c97bf