Back to Search Start Over

The relevance of supersaturation and solubilization in the gastrointestinal tract for oral bioavailability: An in vitro vs. in vivo approach

Authors :
Florian Pöstges
Yann Pellequer
Karl G. Wagner
Katharina Dauer
Alexander Denninger
Tim Becker
Álvaro López Mármol
Antoine Touzet
Alf Lamprecht
Source :
International journal of pharmaceutics. 603
Publication Year :
2020

Abstract

The influence of supersaturation and solubilization on oral absorption was assessed independently from the dissolution process for the non-formulated model drugs celecoxib and telmisartan. In vitro, physicochemical characterization and biphasic dissolution were used to characterize the supersaturation and solubilization effects of three water soluble polymers (copovidone, methylcellulose and Soluplus®) on the drugs. While celecoxib precipitated in a crystalline form resulting in pronounced stabilization of supersaturation, telmisartan precipitated as a highly energetic amorphous form and the potential of the polymers to enhance its solubility was subsequently, limited. In vivo, for the crystalline precipitating celecoxib, supersaturation and solubilization increased its oral bioavailability up to 10-fold. On the contrary, the amorphous precipitating telmisartan did not benefit from the limited stabilization in terms of oral exposure. Amongst all investigated in vitro tests the biphasic dissolution test was the most predictive in relation to supersaturation. However, for the potential micellar solubilization and the respective impact in the aqueous/organic interface, prediction accuracy of the biphasic dissolution test was limited in combination with Soluplus®. Despite the hetergeneous micellar distribution in vitro and permeation in vivo, the biphasic approach could clearly show the supersaturation potential on bioavailability (BA) for celecoxib on the one hand and the inferiority of supersaturation on BA for telmisartan.

Details

ISSN :
18733476
Volume :
603
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
International journal of pharmaceutics
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....974a91a5e617e1a2b79c7375973a9beb