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Freezing of Aqueous Solutions and Chemical Stability of Amorphous Pharmaceuticals: Water Clusters Hypothesis

Authors :
Alan K. Soper
Satoshi Ohtake
Ke Wu
J. Axel Zeitler
Michael J. Pikal
Christopher J. Roberts
Evgenyi Shalaev
Elena V. Boldyreva
Zeitler, Axel [0000-0002-4958-0582]
Apollo - University of Cambridge Repository
Source :
Journal of pharmaceutical sciences. 108(1)
Publication Year :
2018

Abstract

Molecular mobility has been traditionally invoked to explain physical and chemical stability of diverse pharmaceutical systems. Although the molecular mobility concept has been credited with creating a scientific basis for stabilization of amorphous pharmaceuticals and biopharmaceuticals, it has become increasingly clear that this approach represents only a partial description of the underlying fundamental principles. An additional mechanism is proposed herein to address 2 key questions: (1) the existence of unfrozen water (i.e., partial or complete freezing inhibition) in aqueous solutions at subzero temperatures and (2) the role of water in the chemical stability of amorphous pharmaceuticals. These apparently distant phenomena are linked via the concept of water clusters. In particular, freezing inhibition is associated with the confinement of water clusters in a solidified matrix of an amorphous solute, with nanoscaled water clusters being observed in aqueous glasses using wide-angle neutron scattering. The chemical instability is suggested to be directly related to the catalysis of proton transfer by water clusters, considering that proton transfer is the key elementary reaction in many chemical processes, including such common reactions as hydrolysis and deamidation.

Details

ISSN :
15206017
Volume :
108
Issue :
1
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Journal of pharmaceutical sciences
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....91253a5fa10e45a3069681f6d1d829de