6533b853fe1ef96bd12acbdd
RESEARCH PRODUCT
Relationship between rheological properties, in vitro release and in vivo equivalency of topical formulations of diclofenac.
Virginia MerinoVirginia MerinoDaniel PerisMarta SallanMaría Pleguezuelos-villaMª Jesús HernándezIrene HidalgoMatilde Merino-sanjuánAmparo NácherLluís Solersubject
AdultMaleDiclofenacAdolescentAdministration TopicalPharmaceutical ScienceBiological Availability02 engineering and technologyBioequivalence030226 pharmacology & pharmacy03 medical and health sciencesYoung Adult0302 clinical medicineDiclofenacPharmacokineticsRheologyIn vivomedicineHumansMathematicsTopical drugCross-Over StudiesMiddle Aged021001 nanoscience & nanotechnologyIn vitroBioavailabilityTherapeutic EquivalencyArea Under CurveFemale0210 nano-technologyRheologyBiomedical engineeringmedicine.drugdescription
Determination of bioequivalence remains a challenge in generic topical drug development. To support pharmacokinetic studies, strategies to demonstrate microstructure sameness of the products being compared include in vitro evaluations, such as the comparison of rheological properties, droplet size and in vitro release rates. Nevertheless, defining the appropriate acceptance range to consider equivalence between test and reference formulation is complex. To shed more light into this issue, in vitro release and rheological properties were compared to in vivo bioequivalence data (systemic blood measurements within a clinical trial) after topical application of a single dose. Test and reference formulations of diclofenac diethylamine emulgels were evaluated. While the test formulation met the requirements for equivalence in both the in vivo bioequivalence and in vitro release study, the rheological properties were considered equivalent depending on the criteria used. The 90% confidence interval of the ratios between geometric mean values of both formulations were within the limits of 75-133%, but outside the 90-111% limit under discussion in the scientific community. Altogether these data indicate that differences beyond ±10% between rheological parameters of test and reference formulation might not translate into meaningful release nor bioavailability divergence.
year | journal | country | edition | language |
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2019-07-09 | International journal of pharmaceutics |