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Controlled Release A Technical Review ®TMTrademark of The Dow Chemical Company (“Dow”) or an affiliated company of Dow Simple steps to help give customers what they want Many years of commercial experience indicate that the physical properties and drug release of controlled-release (CR) tablets containing METHOCEL™ cellulose ethers have excellent long-term stability. Several studies conducted by Dow Wolff Cellulosics have confirmed this observation. Study 1: Effects of storage time and elevated temperatures on drug degradation and dissolution One study examined the effect of storage time at elevated temperature on tablets containing mixtures of diclofenac sodium and METHOCELTM USP 2910 combined with 1% silicon dioxide and 0.5% magnesium stearate. The mixtures were: • 50/50 diclofenac sodium/4000 mPa˙s METHOCELTM • 50/37.5/12.5 diclofenac sodium/4000 mPa˙s METHOCELTM/ 50 mPa˙s METHOCELTM • 50/25/25 diclofenac sodium/4000 mPa˙s METHOCELTM/ 50 mPa˙s METHOCELTM • 50/12.5/37.5 diclofenac sodium/4000 mPa˙s METHOCELTM/ 50 mPa˙s METHOCELTM • 50/50 diclofenac sodium/50 mPa˙s METHOCELTM Tablets were prepared using wet granulation; target tablet weight was 750 mg. Tablets were stored in amber bottles. No further details were given on containers used or number of tablets per container. Storage conditions were 1, 2, and 3 months at ambient temperature, 31, 37, and 43°C. Humidity was 75% for all temperature conditions except ambient. The authors found that none of the five formulations showed a significant effect of storage time or temperature on drug degradation or dissolution. 01 Controlled Release ®TMTrademark of The Dow Chemical Company (“Dow”) or an affiliated company of Dow Controlled Release 02 STUDY 2: Impact of storage time, temperature and humidity on drug degradation and dissolution Another study investigated the effect of storage time, temperature, and humidity on drug degradation and dissolution of matrix tablets containing alprazolam and either METHOCELTM K100 LV or METHOCELTM K4M. The formulation containing METHOCELTM K100 LV included 45% METHOCELTM K100 LV, 2.5% alprazolam, 20% microcrystalline cellulose, 31.5% lactose, 0.5% silicon dioxide, and 0.5% magnesium stearate. The formulation containing METHOCELTM K4M included 37% METHOCELTM K4M, 2.5% alprazolam, 20% microcrystalline cellulose, 39.5% lactose, 0.5% silicon dioxide, and 0.5% magnesium stearate. Tablets were prepared by direct compression; target tablet weight was 400 mg. The tablets were placed in 60-mL, white, high-density polypropylene (HDPE) bottles. Each bottle contained 80 tablets. Storage conditions were 25°C at 60% RH and 40°C at 75% RH. Tables 1 and 2 show the effects of up to 12 months storage on drug assay and hardness. As shown by similarity factors greater than 50, there was no significant effect of storage time or conditions on assay. Figures 1 and 2 provide the results from drug dissolution testing for up to 12 months of storage. Storage time and conditions did not appear to affect drug dissolution in these formulations. This study examined the effects of storage time and humidity on the physical properties and drug release of hydrophilic matrix tablets containing the model drug hydrochlorothiazide and either METHOCEL™ K4MP or METHOCEL™ K100MP. The formulation included 87% METHOCEL™ K4MP or K100MP, 12.5% hydrochlorothiazide, and 0.5% magnesium stearate. Tablets were prepared using direct compression; tablet weight was adjusted to 200 mg. Tablets were stored for 1, 3, and 6 months at 20°C in air-tight boxes. According to the authors, the boxes contained reservoirs of sulfuric acid at the dilution required to establish relative humidity such that the equilibrium moisture content of the METHOCEL™ product was 5% or 8%. The lower humidity corresponded to the prestorage equilibrium moisture content of the cellulose ethers. The actual relative humidity was interpreted to be roughly 35-40% and 50-55%, respectively. Figure 3 provides the representative data. The results for METHOCEL™ K4MP and K100MP were similar. Drug release was not significantly affected by storage time and storage at the lower relative humidity had no significant effects on tablet properties. However, storage at the higher humidity resulted in reductions in crushing strength, and increases in total porosity and mean pore diameter. Most changes occurred within 1 month of storage. The authors concluded that storage of METHOCEL™based tablets for 6 months at 20°C had no significant effect on physical properties unless storage humidity was high enough to allow the tablets to absorb a significant amount of water. Drug release, as measured by the fraction of the area under the dissolution curve between 0 and 8 h relative to the total area under the curve, was not significantly affected by storage time or humidity. 03 Controlled Release TABLE1: EFFECT OF STORAGE TIME AND CONDITIONS ON DRUG DEGRADATION OF HYDROPHILIC MATRIX TABLETS CONTAINING ALPRAZOLAM AND METHOCELTM K4MP. (37% METHOCELTM K4MP, 2.5% alprazolam, 20% microcrystalline cellulose, 39.5% lactose, 0.5% silicon dioxide, and 0.5% magnesium stearate) STABILITY SAMPLE (TIME, CONDITION) COMPOSITE ASSAY (MG) SIMILIRATY FACTOR (F2) Initial 105.58 ref AMBIENT (25°C/60%RH) 3 months 6 months 12 months 102.01 103.15 105.09 84 96 81 AMBIENT (40°C/75%RH) 1 months 2 months 3 months 6 months 105.56 101.35 102.14 102.58 FIGURE 1: EFFECT OF STORAGE TIME, TEMPERATURE AND HUMIDITY ON DRUG DISSOLUTION OF HYDROPHILIC MATRIX TABLETS CONTAINING ALPRAZOLAM AND METHOCELTM K100P LV (45% METHOCELTM K100P LV, 2.5% alprazolam, 20% microcrystalline cellulose, 31.5% lactose, 0.5% silicon dioxide, 0.5% magnesium stearate) Drug released, % // Time, H FIGURE 3: EFFECT OF STORAGE TIME AND HUMIDITY ON SELECTED PHYSICAL PROPERTIES AND DRUG DISSOLUTION OR HYDROPHILIC MATRIX TABLETS CONTAINING HYDROCHIOROTHIAZIDE AND METHOCELTM K4MP. 87% METHOCELTM K4MP, 12.5% hydrochlorothiazide, 0.5% magnesium stearate) Crushing strength, N // Time, months 120 120 100 100 80 80 60 40 91 75 81 81 60 20 0 0 TABLE2: EFFECT OF STORAGE TIME AND CONDITIONS ON DRUG DEGRADATION OF HYDROPHILIC MATRIX TABLETS CONTAINING ALPRAZOLAM AND METHOCELTM K100P LV. (45% METHOCELTM K100P LV, 2.5% alprazolam, 20% microcrystalline cellulose, 31.5% lactose, 0.5% silicon dioxide, and 0.5% magnesium stearate) STABILITY SAMPLE (TIME, CONDITION) COMPOSITE ASSAY (MG) SIMILIRATY FACTOR (F2) Initial 101.04 ref Initial 26°C, 80%RH, 3mo. 2 4 6 26°C, 80%RH, 6mo. 26°C, 80%RH, 12mo. 8 10 12 40°C, 80%RH, 1mo. 40°C, 80%RH, 2mo. 14 16 40°C, 80%RH, 3mo. 40°C, 80%RH, 6mo. 1 2 3 4 5 6 6% moisture 8% moisture 0-8 h Dissolution efficiency // Time, months FIGURE 2: EFFECT OF STORAGE TIME, TEMPERATURE, AND HUMIDITY ON DRUG DISSOLUTION OF HYDROPHILIC MATRIX TABLETS CONTAINING ALPRAZOLAM AND METHOCELTM K4MP. (37% METHOCELTM K4MP, 2.5% alprazolam, 20% microcrystalline cellulose, 31.5% lactose, 0.5 silicon dioxide, 0.5% magnesium stearate) Drug released, % // Time, H 0,35 0,30 AMBIENT (25°C/60%RH) 3 months 6 months 12 months 100.15 102.75 100.21 83 94 85 100.11 100.35 101.10 103.57 0,25 100 0,20 80 AMBIENT (40°C/75%RH) 1 months 2 months 3 months 6 months 120 93 88 89 84 60 0,15 40 0 20 2 4 6 6% moisture 8% moisture 0 Initial 26°C, 80%RH, 3mo. 2 4 6 26°C, 80%RH, 6mo. 26°C, 80%RH, 12mo. 8 10 12 40°C, 80%RH, 1mo. 40°C, 80%RH, 2mo. 14 16 40°C, 80%RH, 3mo. 40°C, 80%RH, 6mo. ®TMTrademark of The Dow Chemical Company (“Dow”) or an affiliated company of Dow Controlled Release 04 Study 3: Effects of scale-up, storage time and temperature on drug stability and release A study involving CR tablets containing theophylline as the model drug and METHOCELTM K4MP CR cellulose ether examined the effects of process scale-up, storage time, temperature, and humidity on the stability of physical properties and drug release. The formulation included 30% METHOCELTM K4MP CR, 50% theophylline, 19.75% lactose, and 0.25% magnesium stearate. Tablets were prepared from laboratory, pilot-plant, and full-scale granulations using roll compaction. Target tablet weight was 400 mg. Tablets were stored in 60-mL, opaque, polypropylene (PP) bottles, 60 tablets per bottle. Stability was evaluated under ambient conditions (21°C/50% relative humidity) and accelerated conditions (40°C/75% relative humidity). The testing intervals were 1, 2, 3, 6, 9, and 12 months. Table 3 shows the results of 12-month stability testing on the physical properties of production-scale samples. Tablets stored under ambient conditions showed little change in tablet crushing strength, tablet thickness, and tablet weight over the 12-month period. Tablets stored under accelerated conditions showed a slight lowering of tablet crushing strength values during the same 12-month period. However, tablet thickness and tablet weight values showed only minor differences. No correlation was observed between slight reductions in tablet crushing strength values under accelerated conditions and tablet thickness and tablet weight. TABLE 3: EFFECT OF STORAGE TIME AND CONDITIONS ON PHYSICAL PROPERTIES OF HYDROPHILIC MATRIX TABLETS CONTAINING THEOPHYLINE AND METHOCELTM K4MP CR (PRODUCTION SCALE). (30% METHOCELTM K4MP CR, 50% Theophyline, 19,75% lactose, and 0.25% magnesium stearate) STABILITY SAMPLE (TIME, CONDITION) Initial AVE. TABLET CRUSHING STRENGH (SCU, SD) AVE. TABLET CRUSHING STRENGH (SCU, SD) AVE. TABLET WEIGHT (MG, 5D) 30.6, 1.4 5.7 401,2 AMBIENT (25°C/60%RH) 1 months 2 months 3 months 6 months 9 months 12 months 29.1, 3.0 27.1, 2.5 25.9, 1.4 23.8, 1.4 27.1. 1.8 26.5, 1.5 5.7 5.8 5.9 5.8 5.9 5.7 400,9 400,5 403,4 403,4 401,5 403,5 26.2, 2.1 24.4, 1.5 24.4, 1.2 23.1, 1.2 15.9, 1.1 18.8, 1.2 5.7 5.9 5.9 5.8 6.0 6.0 405,7 404,4 400,4 402,4 404,6 413,6 FIGURE 5: EFFECT OF STORAGE TIME AT 40°C/75% RH ON DRUG DISSOLUTION OF HYDROPHILIC MATRIX TABLETS CONTAINING THEOPHYLLINE AND METHOCELTM K4MP CR (PRODUCTION SCALE). (30% METHOCELTM K4MP CR, 50% theophylline, 19.75% lactose, 0.25% magnesium stearate) Drug released, % // Time, H 100 100 80 80 60 60 40 40 20 20 0 AMBIENT (40°C/75%RH) 1 months 2 months 3 months 6 months 9 months 12 months FIGURE 4: EFFECT OF STORAGE TIME AT 21°C/50% RH ON DRUG DISSOLUTION OF HYDROPHILIC MATRIX TABLETS CONTAINING THEOPHYLLINE AND METHOCELTM K4MP CR (PRODUCTION SCALE). (30% METHOCELTM K4MP CR, 50% theophylline, 19.75% lactose, 0.25% magnesium stearate) Drug released, % // Time, H Initial 1 mo. 5 2 mo. 6 mo. 10 15 9 mo. 12 mo. 20 0 Initial 1mo. 5 10 2mo. 3mo. 15 6mo. 9mo. 20 12mo. Similar results were noted for both laboratory and pilot-plant samples. Drug-release profiles from ambient and accelerated conditions were essentially unchanged (Figures 4 and 5). Values for ƒ2 metric on drug release for the ambient samples were greater than 88, indicating similarity between profiles. Values for ƒ2 metric on drug release for the accelerated samples were greater than 75, also indicating similarity between profiles. 05 Controlled Release ®TMTrademark of The Dow Chemical Company (“Dow”) or an affiliated company of Dow Controlled Release 06 STUDY 4: Effects of storage time, temperature and humidity on drug release, degradation and hardness A study involving dihydroergotoxine mesylate investigated the effect of storage time, temperature, and humidity on drug release, assay, degradation products, and tablet hardness. One formulation included 39.8% METHOCELTM E4MP CR, 6.4% dihydroergotoxine mesylate, 45.7% lactose, 0.3% sodium lauryl sulfate, 5.2% microcrystalline cellulose, and 2.7% polyvinylpyrrolidone. Tablets were prepared using fluid bed granulation; target tablet weight was not specified. Tablets were placed in glass containers for stability testing. No further details on containers or number of tablets per container were given. Storage times were 32, 91, 186, and 375 days; storage conditions were 2-8°C, 25°C/NMT60% RH, 30°C, 37°C, 45°C, and 25°C/80% RH. The authors found the formulation to be stable at elevated humidity conditions (Table 4). At elevated temperature conditions, degradation products of the drug increased. However, the tablet hardness and dissolution profile (data not shown) were not affected by either storage time or storage conditions. Similar dissolution results were found in a study involving pseudoephedrine HCl. The formulation contained 61% METHOCELTM K4MP, 13% pseudoephedrine HCl, and 26% sodium carboxymethylcellulose (NaCMC). Tablets were prepared by direct compression; target tablet weight was not specified. Tablets were placed in amber glass bottles. No further details on containers or number of tablets per container were given. Storage conditions included 37°C, 45°C, and 37°C/80% RH for 3 months. Drug dissolution was very similar under all three conditions. The authors concluded that the release integrity of the tablets under these accelerated conditions indicated good stability. Stark et al.1 studied the effect of accelerated stability conditions on tablet crushing strength, in vitro dissolution, and in vivo performance of tablets containing a Class I drug and 60% METHOCEL™. No information was given on tablet preparation. Tablets were stored in 100-mL, white, HPDE bottles, 100 tablets per bottle. Two conditions were used: 25°C/60% RH (nonstressed) and 40°C/75% RH (stressed). Crushing strength and in vitro drug dissolution were determined over 6 months. In vivo evaluations involving Cmax and AUC parameters were performed on stressed and nonstressed tablets stored for 3 months. This study is unusual in that it included in vivo as well as in vitro evaluation. Stark, P., Kinahan, A., Cunningham, S., Farrell, C., Butler, J., Reilly, M., and Devane, J., “In Vivo-In Vitro Evaluation of the Impact of Accelerated Stability Conditions on a Hydrophilic Matrix Tablet,” In:Young et al. (ed.) In Vitro-In Vivo Correlations, Plenum Press, New York, 221-224, (1997). TABLE 4: EFFECT OF STORAGE TIME AND CONDITIONS ON PHYSICAL PROPERTIES OF HYDROPHILIC MATRIX TABLETS CONTAINING THEOPHYLINE AND METHOCELTM K4MP CR (PRODUCTION SCALE). (30% METHOCELTM K4MP CR, 50% Theophyline, 19,75% lactose, and 0.25% magnesium stearate) 2-8°C 25°C/NMT60% RH 30°C 37°C 45°C 25°C/80% RH 0 - 104.4 - - - - 32 91 186 375 103.3 104.1 102.7 101.8 104.1 104.1 104.1 101.6 103.3 103.3 102.3 102.4 103.1 103.1 104.4 101.4 102.7 102.0 103.2 100.3 102.7 103.8 107.7 102.6 0.41 0.55 0.55 0.40 0.41 0.55 0.55 0.53 0.55 0.60 0.90 0.95 0.85 1.20 1.60 1.45 0.40 0.70 0.70 25.6, 38.7 37.7, 45.8 32.6, 35.6 33.6, 42.8 32.6-54.0 35.6-41.2 38.7-50.9 32.6-44.8 24.4-40.7 35.6-36.5 47.9-58.1 22.4-39.7 28.5-35.6 33.1-45.3 30.1-44.4 33.6-43.8 30.5-34.6 41.7-44.78 37.6-56.2 35.6-44.4 44.8-64.2 34.6-37.8 32.6-48.8 43.8-56.0 32.6-38.7 TIME (DAYS) ASSAY (%) DEGRADATION PRODUCTS (%) 0 32 91 186 TABLET HARDNESS (N) 0 32 91 186 375 1 07 Controlled Release ®TMTrademark of The Dow Chemical Company (“Dow”) or an affiliated company of Dow Controlled Release 08 STUDY 4: Effects of storage time, temperature and humidity on drug release, degradation and hardness TABLE 5: EFFECT OF STORAGE TIME AND CONDITIONS ON CRUSHING STRENGH OF HYDROPHILIC MATRIX TABLETS CONTAINING A CLASS I DRUG AND 60% HYPROMELLOSE. CRUSHING STRENGH (N) NONSTRESSED (25°C/60%RH) TIME (MONTHS) RANGE 0 1 2 3 4 6 249-283 N/E N/E 260-288 N/E 256-277 N/E : NOT EXAMINED STRESSED (40°C/75%RH) MEAN 269 N/E N/E 276 N/E 268 RANGE 249-283 208-241 166-199 159-186 163-180 158-183 MEAN 269 226 186 173 173 172 Table 5 shows the effect of storage time and conditions on tablet crushing strength. At 3 months, the crushing strength of the stressed tablets was 37% lower than that of the nonstressed tablets, dropping from 269 N to 173 N. Most of the decrease occurred in the first two months. Storage at accelerated stability conditions did not affect either in vitro dissolution profiles or in vivo results, indicating that stressed and nonstressed tablets were bioequivalent. Joly and Brossard1 studied the effect of storage time, temperature, and humidity on the physical properties and release characteristics of tablets containing theophylline and METHOCEL™ K4M. The formulation described in the article contained 20% METHOCEL™ K4M, 50% theophylline, 25% lactose, 4% polyvinylpyrrolidone, and 1% magnesium stearate. However, stability testing was described as conducted on tablets containing 25% METHOCEL™ K4M, with no additional information on the remainder of the formulation. Tablets were prepared by wet granulation. Target tablet weight was 400 mg. Stability conditioning was done on loose tablets with no packaging or wrapping. Stability was studied over 5 months under three conditions: ambient air, warm dry air (40°C), and warm moist air (40°C/80% RH). FIGURE 6: EFFECT OF STORAGE CONDITIONS AT 5 MONTHS STORAGE ON WEIGHT OF HYDROPHILIC MATRIX TABLETS CONTAINING THE OPHYLINE AND METHOCELTM K4MP (25% METHOCELTM K4MP, balance not described) Weight variation,% // Time, months FIGURE 7: EFFECT OF STORAGE TIME AT ROOM TEMPERATURE ON RELEASE OF PSEUDOEPHEDRINE HCL FROM HYDROPHILIC MATRIX TABLETS CONTAINING METHOCELTM K4MP. (26.6% METHOCELTM K4MP, 16.0% pseudoephedrine HCl, 56.7% lactose, 0.7% magnesium stearate) Drug release, % // Time, months 120 100 80 60 40 20 0 Ambient air Dry warm air 2 4 6 8 10 12 Immediately after production After 28 months Moist warm air Figure 6 shows the effect of storage conditions on weight of tablets containing 25% METHOCELTM K4M. The tablet weight did not vary significantly from the first to the fifth month, although there was a slight increase in weight variation in warm air. TABLE 6: EFFECT OF STORAGE CONDITIONS AT 5 MONTHS ON THE RELEASE OF THEOPHYLINE FROM HYDROPHILIC MATRIX TABLETS CONTAINING THEOPHYLINE AND METHOCELTM K4MP (25% MethocelTM K4MP, balance not described) AMOUNT DISSOLVED (MG) NONSTRESSED (25°C/60%RH) Figure 7 shows the stability of METHOCEL™ K4M Premium in hydrophilic matrix tablets containing pseudoephedrine HCl. The formulation included 26.6% METHOCEL™ K4M Premium, 16% pseudoephedrine HCl, 56.7% lactose, and 0.7% magnesium stearate. Tablets were prepared by direct compression. No description of containers or number of tablets per container was given. Tablet dissolution was measured immediately after manufacture and again after 28 months storage at room temperature and humidity. Minimal change in the in vitro dissolution resulted over this storage interval. STRESSED (40°C/75%RH) TIME (MONTHS) TIME 0 AMBIENT WARM DRY AIR 1 4 8 13 34 58 12 34 56 14 34 58 WARM MOIST AIR 11 33 57 Table 6 shows the effect of storage conditions on drug dissolution from tablets containing 25% METHOCELTM K4M. The authors concluded that the release of theophylline was independent of the storage conditions tested. Joly, F., Brossard, C., “Development and Application of a Theophylline Hydrophilic Matrix II. Industrial Development and Study of the Cleavability and Stability Characteristics of the Tablets,” S.T.P. Pharma, 3 (11), 872-879 (1987). 1 09 Controlled Release ®TMTrademark of The Dow Chemical Company (“Dow”) or an affiliated company of Dow Controlled Release 10 Study 5: Roller compaction in the preparation of CR hydrophilic matrix tablets containing METHOCELTM Wet granulation is used to enhance material flow during the manufacture of CR matrix formulations. However, hydrophilic components can react with the aqueous system, making wet granulation difficult. Roller compaction is a viable mechanical process for enhancement of material flow in CR matrix tablet formulations containing METHOCELTM and HPMC polymers. TYPICAL DRY GRANULATION SYSTEM WITH RECYCLE Original Mix Feed Hopper w/Screws Compaction Rolls Pressured applied Compacted Ribbon Mill Overs Product Fines Recycle system combines overs, fines and original powders FIGURE 8: PARTICULES-SIZE DISTRIBUTION OF 18/80-MESH GRANULATIONS CONTAINING METHOCELTM 2208 GENERATED DURING THE FIRST ROLLER COMPACTION CYCLE. Retained % // Sieve size Roller compaction uses bonding mechanisms such as particle rearrangement, deformation, and fragmentation to form a granule. The advantages of roller compaction include: • Dry granulation system • High-volume production of granules • Good control of final particle bulk density and flow properties • Low consumption of energy • Minimum labor requirements. In a typical dry granulation system with product recycle, a homogeneous mix is introduced into the top feed hopper, which contains an auger. The auger helps deliver the powder mix to the nip region of the compaction rolls. The rolls, while under hydraulic pressure, compact the powder mixes into ribbons. The ribbons are then milled and passed through a series of screens that size the granules into acceptable product. Granules that are either too large or too small are recycled and combined with original powder mix and passed through the compactor. One study assessed roller compaction in the dry granulation of a CR matrix formulation containing METHOCELTM (methylcellulose or hydroxypropyl methylcellulose [HPMC]), niacinamide, and magnesium stearate. Evaluation of 18/80mesh portions of the granulations showed a similar particlesize distribution. Granulations produced using 1 ton pressure tended to generate smaller granules than those produced using higher roller pressures. Product density increased as a result of roller compaction, but only small differences in density values were observed as a result of varying the compactor roll pressures. Tablet hardness values were consistently higher for material compacted using the lowest roller pressure (1 ton). Inversely, tablet friability values were lowest in granulations compacted at 1 ton pressure. The effect of roller compaction pressure on drug dissolution was minimal (T90% = 5.5- 7.0 h). Extensive recycling of coarse and fine material had a negative impact on the drug levels of some granulations. Elimination of product recycling greatly improved drug-level uniformity. • Particle-size distribution. Granulations produced using the lowest compaction pressure (1 ton) exhibited, on average, smaller diameter granules than those produced using the higher compaction pressures (3 and 6 tons). A similar trend was observed during the second roller compaction of recycled coarse and fine material. Higher roller compactor pressures possibly generate a ribbon that is more resilient to the milling process and thus may produce a coarser particlesize distribution. METHOCELTM 1828 generally produced granules that were smaller than those of the other four cellulosic polymers under similar conditions. The exception was when METHOCELTM 1828 was initially compacted at the high roller pressure. Figures 8-10 show the sieve analysis results of the 18/80-mesh granules generated from METHOCELTM 2208. These figures are representative of the five cellulosic polymers used in Phase I. The majority of the 3- and 6-ton roller compaction granules (23-40%) were retained on the 20-mesh and 30- mesh screens. Based on the level of applied roller compaction pressure, there was a rank order of 6 tons > 3 tons > 1 ton in the percentage of granulation retained on the 20- and 30-mesh screens. The level of fines (<80 mesh) remaining on the pan was 1-5% for the 3- and 6-ton samples and 8-15% for the 1-ton samples. FIGURE 9: PARTICULES-SIZE DISTRIBUTION OF 18/80-MESH GRANULATIONS CONTAINING METHOCELTM 2208 ROLLER COMPACTED DURING THE RECYCLE PHASE USING ONLY> 18-MESH GRANULES. Retained % // Sieve size FIGURE 10: PARTICULES-SIZE DISTRIBUTION OF 18/80-MESH GRANULATIONS CONTAINING METHOCELTM 2208 ROLLER COMPACTED DURING THE RECYCLE PHASE USING ONLY< 80-MESH GRANULES. Retained % // Sieve size 40 30 20 10 20 11 Controlled Release 30 40 60 80 Specific findings included: • Density. The granulations generated from roller compaction of the original mixes demonstrated CI values ranging from 8% to 26% (four granulations containing METHOCELTM were >20%) and provided excellent flow characteristics during tableting on a rotary tablet press. The level of applied roller compaction force (1, 3, and 6 tons) used to generate the compacted ribbons had little effect on CI or density values. The lack of adequate product flow is one of the primary reasons for using roller compaction technology. Tablet compression machinery relies on the use of gravity to efficiently and uniformly feed materials to the subsequent punches and dies at high speeds. The data above indicate that roller compaction is a viable mechanical process for enhancement of material flow. Pan • Compaction efficiency. Efficiency testing is an indication of granule strength. The strength of the granule is related to its ability to withstand the attrition processes during the milling of the compacted ribbons and the aggressive mechanical activity of the RoTap sieve shaker during the sizing/separation operation. Milled ribbons that have a higher percentage of granules retained on the 18-mesh screen and less retained on the pan (or fines material) are an indicator of higher granule strength. The compaction efficiencies of methylcellulose, METHOCELTM 2208, METHOCELTM 2910, and METHOCELTM 2906 were similar. Of these four polymers, METHOCELTM 2910, roller compacted at 1 ton, had the lowest >18-mesh values and the highest <80-mesh values. METHOCELTM 1828 exhibited the lowest percentage of >18-mesh material and the highest percentage of <80-mesh material, indicating that METHOCELTM 1828 granules were low in strength compared to the other materials. This was especially apparent with METHOCELTM 1828 at 1-ton roller compaction pressure, which left almost no material on the 18-mesh screen. ®TMTrademark of The Dow Chemical Company (“Dow”) or an affiliated company of Dow Controlled Release 12 Study 5: Roller compaction in the preparation of CR hydrophilic matrix tablets containing METHOCEL The authors of this study have seen some correlation between compaction efficiency results and tablet friability values. It appears that very low compaction efficiency percentages for >18- mesh material or high percentages for <80-mesh material (fines) may be a predictor of low granule strength and high tablet friability values. Tablet physical testing. It was generally observed (Figure 11) that as the compactor roll pressure was increased from 1 ton through 6 tons, the tablet hardness values decreased. The hardness values of tablets formed using original mixes were consistently higher than the hardness values of tablets generated from granulations that were roller compacted at 3 and 6 tons of pressure. However, those tablets generated from ribbons that were roller compacted at 1 ton had hardness values comparable to tablets from original mixes. Methylcellulose produced the hardest tablets; METHOCELTM 1828 exhibited the lowest hardness values. Lower hardness values in formulations containing roller-compacted material are consistent with findings from previous authors who investigated the reworking of solid dosage forms as a means of retrieving or recycling tablets that are out of specification. The tablet friability test is an indicator of tablet brittleness. It measures how well tablets will withstand the rigors of the tablet coating and packaging processes without excessive wear and abrasion. The friability value is a percent weight loss based upon 20 tablets tumbling in a rotating cylinder over a 6-min period. Therefore, the lower the friability value, the less the amount of tablet wear. As a rule, 6-min friability values of <1% usually equate to acceptable tablet physical characteristics. Methylcellulose, METHOCELTM 2208, METHOCELTM 2910, and METHOCELTM 2906 had friability values of <1%. These cellulosic products also tended to have high compaction efficiency values for granules retained on the 18-mesh screen. METHOCELTM 1828 had the lowest percent of coarse material (>18-mesh) and also demonstrated tablet friability values >1% (1.61-3.06%). Drug dissolution. Figures 8-10 show the release of niacinamide from tablet formulations used in Phase I. Figures 11-13 represent drug dissolutions from Phase IIa-c. Because of the large volume of experiments in this study, only specific figures have been selected for discussion. The drug release from tablets compressed from original (nonroller- compacted) mixes is used in every figure as a point of reference for comparison. The original-mix tablets are labeled as “direct compression” inthe legend of each graph. Phase I drug dissolutions can be divided into three categories based on the level of applied roller compaction pressure (1, 3, and 6 tons). The 1-ton drug dissolution is represented by Figure 12 (METHOCELTM 2906). Three of five polymers exhibited an 8% or greater difference in niacinamide released from recycled and nonrecycled granules. Perhaps at this low roller compaction pressure, the drug and polymer do not bond sufficiently to minimize their separation during product recycling. This separation may cause nonuniform drug levels in the granulations and final tablets. Figure 13 (METHOCELTM 2208) and Figure 14 (METHOCELTM 2910) represent applied roller compaction pressures of 3 tons and 6 tons, respectively. Only two of five polymers at 3 tons and one of five polymers at 6 tons showed a >8% difference in the final percentage of drug released. These results tend to confirm that the higher roller compaction pressures bind the drug and polymer more efficiently. The exception was methylcellulose, USP, which exhibited differences in content uniformity at all three compactor pressures. 13 Controlled Release There was no apparent relationship between the level of applied compactor pressure and drug dissolution nor between tablet hardness and drug dissolution. This observation is consistent with the findings of previous investigators, who found that various applied compaction forces had little effect on drug release from tablets containing METHOCELTM polymers in a matrix system. Prior investigators addressed various tablet press compression forces, and the authors of this study found a similar comparison between various applied roller compactor pressures and drug release from cellulose ether polymers in a matrix system. Figure 15 (Phase IIa) shows the drug release from the first of three Phase II experiments. Assays of individual granulations were used to determine drug content uniformity and were compared with assays of the original mix tablets (direct compression). Results show that the granulation assayed at 91% drug (niacinamide) level for the 1-ton samples, 95% for the 3-ton, and 94% for the 6-ton samples. The original mix assayed at 100% of predicted drug level. This experiment helped to confirm that there was a drug content uniformity concern in many of the previous Phase I experiments, especially those using a 1-ton applied roller compactor pressure. The second experiment (Phase IIb, Figure 16) using one-third original mix, one-third coarse material, and one-third fine material was also assayed to evaluate drug content uniformity in the granulations. Assays of the granulations revealed an 89% drug level in the 1-ton sample, 102% in the 3-ton, and 99% in the 6-ton samples. This second experiment showed that increasing the percentage of recycled material did not solve the drug uniformity problem. The third experiment in Phase II (Figure 17) used a system in which no product recycle was involved so that drug content uniformity problems associated with excessive sieving and processing would not be a significant factor. Compacted ribbons were milled and only passed through a 16-mesh screen. The quantity of coarse material was consistently <2%. Assays of the granulations showed a 103% drug level for the 1- ton roller compacted samples, 101% for the 3-ton, and 100% for the 6-ton samples. Minimizing the amount of product recycle during the roller compaction process appears to be an important parameter in enhancing drug content uniformity in the finished tablets. FIGURE 11: EFFECT OF ROLLER COMPACTION PRESSURE ON TABLET HARDNESS VALUES. Tablet hardness, SCU (Strong-Cobb units) // Roller compaction pressure, tons FIGURE 13: TABLET DISSOLUTION WITH METHOCELTM 2208 USING 3 TONS ROLLER COMPACTION PRESSURE (PHASE I) Niacinamide release, % // Time, H FIGURE 12: TABLET DISSOLUTION WITH METHOCELTM 2906 USING 1 TON ROLLER COMPACTION PRESSURE (PHASE I) Niacinamide release, % // Time, H 100 100 80 80 60 60 40 40 20 20 0 3 Direct compression 2nd roller compaction cycle using only >18 mesh granules 6 9 12 15 1st roller compaction cycle 2nd roller compaction cycle using only <80 mesh granules FIGURE 14: TABLET DISSOLUTION WITH METHOCELTM 2910 USING 6 TONS ROLLER COMPACTION PRESSURE (PHASE I). Niacinamide release, % // Time, H 100 100 80 80 60 60 40 40 20 20 0 3 Direct compression 2nd roller compaction cycle using only >18 mesh granules 6 9 12 15 0 Direct compression (mix assay = 100%) 1st roller compaction cycle 2nd roller compaction cycle using only <80 mesh granules 100 100 10 80 80 60 60 40 40 20 20 2 OM* METHOCELTM 2208, USP METHOCELTM, USP 1 2 METHOCELTM 1828, USP METHOCELTM 2906, USP 3 4 METHOCELTM 2910, USP *Original mix (compressed on Carver press) 5 6 0 3 1 ton (granulation assay = 89%) 3 tons (granulation assay = 102%) 6 tons (granulation assay = 99%) 6 9 Direct compression (mix assay = 100%) 12 6 9 12 15 1st roller compaction cycle 2nd roller compaction cycle using only <80 mesh granules 3 6 1 ton (granulation assay = 91%) 3 tons (granulation assay = 95%) 9 12 15 6 tons (granulation assay = 94%) FIGURE 17: TABLET DISSOLUTION WITH METHYLCELLULOSE USING ALL GRANULATED MATERIAL PASSING THROUGH A 16-MESH SCREEN AND NO PRODUCT RECYCLE AT 1, 3 AND 6 TON ROLLER COMPACTION PRESSURE (PHASE IIC). Niacinamide release, % // Time, H 14 6 3 FIGURE 15: TABLET DISSOLUTION WITH METHYLCELLULOSE USING 1, 3, AND 6 TON ROLLER COMPACTION PRESSURE (PHASE IIA). Niacinamide release, % // Time, H FIGURE 16: TABLET DISSOLUTION WITH METHYLCELLULOSE USING 1/3 ORIGINAL MIX, 1/3 COARSE (>18 MESH) GRANULES, AND 1/3 FINE (<80 MESH) GRANULES AT 1, 3, AND 6 TON ROLLER COMPACTION PRESSURE (PHASE IIB). Niacinamide release, % // Time, H 18 0 Direct compression 2nd roller compaction cycle using only >18 mesh granules 15 0 3 1 ton (granulation assay = 103%) 3 tons (granulation assay = 101%) 6 tons (granulation assay = 100%) 6 9 12 15 Direct compression (mix assay = 100%) ®TMTrademark of The Dow Chemical Company (“Dow”) or an affiliated company of Dow Controlled Release 14 Controlled Release North America: +1 800 258 2436 Europe: +31 11 567 2626 Pacific: +60 3 7965 5392 Latin America: +55 11 5188 9000 [email protected] www.dowwolff.com A truly global offering with our Colorcon Alliance The global pharmaceutical industry is demanding everfaster development and more efficient production of drug ingredients. We’ve addressed this through an alliance with Colorcon for the global marketing, sales, technical service and distribution of these METHOCEL™, ETHOCEL™ and POLYOX™ pharmaceutical excipient products for use in controlled release applications. This alliance allows Dow Wolff Cellulosics to address customer needs for value-added service throughout the world in controlled release applications. It frees intellectual capital and people resources to develop improved and new technologies to enhance performance during pharmaceutical manufacturing, distribution and use. ®TMTrademark of The Dow Chemical Company (“Dow”) or an affiliated company of Dow • Form No. 198-02257 - 10/11 EST NOTICE: No freedom from infringement of any patent owned by Dow or others is to be inferred. Because use conditions and applicable laws may differ from one location to another and may change with time, Customer is responsible for determining whether products and the information in this document are appropriate for Customer’s use and for ensuring that Customer’s workplace and disposal practices are in compliance with applicable laws and other government enactments. 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