Search results for "Dosage form"

showing 10 items of 194 documents

Biowaiver Monograph for Immediate-Release Solid Oral Dosage Forms: Amoxicillin Trihydrate

2018

Literature and experimental data relevant to waiver of in vivo bioequivalence (BE) testing for the approval of immediate-release solid oral dosage forms containing amoxicillin trihydrate are reviewed. Solubility and permeability characteristics according to the Biopharmaceutics Classification System (BCS), therapeutic uses, therapeutic index, excipient interactions, as well as dissolution and BE and bioavailability studies were taken into consideration. Solubility and permeability studies indicate that amoxicillin doses up to 875 mg belong to BCS class I, whereas 1000 mg belongs to BCS class II and doses of more than 1000 mg belong to BCS class IV. Considering all aspects, the biowaiver pro…

0301 basic medicine030106 microbiologyAdministration OralBiological AvailabilityPharmaceutical ScienceExcipientPharmacologyBioequivalence030226 pharmacology & pharmacyPermeabilityDosage formBiopharmaceuticsExcipients03 medical and health sciences0302 clinical medicinemedicineAnimalsHumansDosage FormsActive ingredientChemistryBiopharmaceuticsAmoxicillinAmoxicillinBiopharmaceutics Classification SystemBioavailabilitySolubilityTherapeutic Equivalencymedicine.drugJournal of Pharmaceutical Sciences
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Biowaiver Monographs for Immediate Release Solid Oral Dosage Forms: Ribavirin

2015

Literature data relevant to the decision to allow a waiver of in vivo bioequivalence (BE) testing for the approval of immediate release solid oral dosage forms containing ribavirin are reviewed. Ribavirin is highly soluble, but its permeability characteristics are not well defined. Therefore according to the Biopharmaceutical Classification System, and taking a “worst case” approach, ribavirin should be assigned to class III. As ribavirin is transported across the brush border membrane of the human jejunum by hCNT2, it shows saturable uptake in the intestine. However, no common excipients have been shown to compete for ribavirin absorption, nor have problems with BE of immediate release rib…

0301 basic medicineDrugribavirinDrug Compoundingvirusesmedia_common.quotation_subjectAdministration OralPharmaceutical ScienceCapsulesPharmacologyBioequivalenceAntiviral Agents030226 pharmacology & pharmacyPermeabilityArticleDosage formExcipients03 medical and health scienceschemistry.chemical_compound0302 clinical medicineTherapeutic indexHumansMedicineImmediate releasemedia_commonbusiness.industrysolubilityRibavirinvirus diseasesbiochemical phenomena metabolism and nutritionBCSbiowaiver030112 virologydigestive system diseasesBiopharmaceuticalTherapeutic EquivalencychemistryManufacturing methodsbusinessabsorptionTabletsJournal of Pharmaceutical Sciences
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Effect of Calcium Ions on the Disintegration of Enteric-Coated Solid Dosage Forms.

2015

To investigate the effect of calcium ions on the disintegration of enteric-coated dosage forms, disintegration testing was performed on enteric-coated aspirin tablets in the presence and absence of calcium in the test media. The results show that the presence of calcium ions retards the disintegration of enteric-coated dosage forms. This finding, which has not been reported in scientific literature, sheds light on the importance of conducting well-designed detailed investigations into the potential of calcium from dietary sources, calcium supplements, antacids, and/or phosphate binders affecting the absorption of drugs formulated into enteric-coated dosage forms. Moreover, it shows the nece…

030213 general clinical medicineDrug LiberationPharmaceutical Sciencechemistry.chemical_elementExcipientCalciumPharmacology030226 pharmacology & pharmacyDosage form03 medical and health scienceschemistry.chemical_compoundCalcium Chloride0302 clinical medicinemedicineSolubilityDosage FormsAspirinPhosphateEnteric coatingBioavailabilityDrug LiberationchemistrySolubilityTablets Enteric-Coatedmedicine.drugNuclear chemistryJournal of pharmaceutical sciences
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Mechanistic understanding of underperforming enteric coated products: Opportunities to add clinical relevance to the dissolution test.

2020

Over the last 70 years several cases of in vivo failure of enteric coated (EC) formulations have been reported. The observed failures seem to be due to the slower than expected in vivo performance of EC products. Upon reaching the intestinal lumen, the dosage form is exposed to a bicarbonate buffered environment at much lower interfacial buffering capacity compared to those applied in compendial phosphate buffers. Hence, there is an urgent need to understand the behavior of EC products in bicarbonate buffer (BCB) and to revaluate the current dissolution methods used for such products. The current pilot study mechanistically investigated the performance of five EC products available in the C…

0303 health sciencesCanadaChromatographyBicarbonateEnteric coated tabletsChemistry PharmaceuticalPharmaceutical SciencePilot Projects02 engineering and technologyBuffersHydrogen-Ion Concentration021001 nanoscience & nanotechnologyPhosphateDosage formBuffer (optical fiber)03 medical and health scienceschemistry.chemical_compoundchemistrySolubilityDissolution testingFÁRMACOSEnteric coated0210 nano-technologyDissolution030304 developmental biologyJournal of controlled release : official journal of the Controlled Release Society
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2019

The treatment of enteric bacterial infections using oral bacteriophage therapy can be challenging since the harsh acidic stomach environment renders phages inactive during transit through the gastrointestinal tract. Solid oral dosage forms allowing site-specific gastrointestinal delivery of high doses of phages, e.g., using a pH or enzymatic trigger, would be a game changer for the nascent industry trying to demonstrate the efficacy of phages, including engineered phages for gut microbiome modulation in expensive clinical trials. Spray-drying is a scalable, low-cost process for producing pharmaceutical agents in dry powder form. Encapsulation of a model Salmonella-specific phage (Myoviridae…

0303 health sciencesSalmonellaChromatographybiology030306 microbiologyPharmaceutical ScienceMyoviridaebiology.organism_classificationmedicine.disease_causeTrehaloseDosage formBacteriophage03 medical and health scienceschemistry.chemical_compoundTabletingchemistrySpray dryingDrug DiscoverymedicineMolecular MedicineDesiccation030304 developmental biologyPharmaceuticals
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Buccal drug delivery: what's new and what does the future hold?

2014

The buccal mucosa is the stratified squamous epithelial tissue inside lining of the cheeks. It is a favorable site of drug absorption since the tissue is non-keratinized, relatively immobile and strongly supplied with blood by a dense capillary-vessel network; moreover, it is highly tolerant to allergens, resistant to potentially harmful agents and has a relatively low enzymatic activity. The tissue consents quick onset of effect, offers an easily accessible and generally well-accepted site for drug delivery, is a useful route of administration in patients in an unconscious state (e.g., when swallowing is impaired), and is suitable for retentive dosage forms of administration. Buccal mucosa…

3003Drugmedia_common.quotation_subjectChemistry PharmaceuticalPharmaceutical ScienceDentistryPharmacologyDosage formRoute of administrationDrug Delivery SystemsPharmacokineticsMucositisMedicineAnimalsHumansBuccal dosage formmedia_commonDosage FormsDrug Carriersbusiness.industryLocoregional/systemic treatmentMedicine (all)Mouth MucosaAdministration BuccalTransmucosal deliveryBuccal administrationmedicine.diseaseBioavailabilityPharmaceutical PreparationsSettore CHIM/09 - Farmaceutico Tecnologico ApplicativoDrug deliveryBuccal mucosaDiffusion of InnovationbusinessForecastingTherapeutic delivery
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PLS-UV spectrophotometric method for the simultaneous determination of paracetamol, acetylsalicylic acid and caffeine in pharmaceutical formulations

1997

A simple and fast analytical procedure is proposed for the simultaneous determination of paracetamol, acetylsalicylic acid and caffeine in pharmaceuticals by means the partial least square treatment of the spectrophotometric absorbance data between 216 and 300 nm, taken at 5 nm intervals. The method involves the use of 8 standard mixtures of the three compounds assayed, considered at two concentration levels, and the measurement of the absorbance of samples in a 20% (v/v) ethanol in water solution previously filtered. In the analysis of real and synthetic samples precise and accurate values were obtained by the aforementioned procedure, providing in all cases variation coefficients and accu…

Absorbancechemistry.chemical_compoundChromatographychemistrymedicine.diagnostic_testSpectrophotometryPartial least squares regressionmedicineCaffeineBiochemistryQuantitative analysis (chemistry)Dosage formFresenius' Journal of Analytical Chemistry
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Improving Dissolution Behavior and Oral Absorption of Drugs with pH-Dependent Solubility Using pH Modifiers: A Physiologically Realistic Mass Transpo…

2021

Orally dosed drugs must dissolve in the gastrointestinal (GI) tract before being absorbed through the epithelial cell membrane. In vivo drug dissolution depends on the GI tract's physiological conditions such as pH, residence time, luminal buffers, intestinal motility, and transit and drug properties under fed and fasting conditions (Paixao, P. et al. Mol. Pharm. 2018 and Bermejo, et al. M. Mol. Pharm. 2018). The dissolution of an ionizable drug may benefit from manipulating in vivo variables such as the environmental pH using pH-modifying agents incorporated into the dosage form. A successful example is the use of such agents for dissolution enhancement of BCS class IIb (high-permeability,…

Absorption (pharmacology)Chemistry PharmaceuticalAdministration OralBiological AvailabilityPharmaceutical ScienceModels BiologicalDosage formAcid dissociation constantExcipientsFumaratesDrug DiscoveryHumansComputer SimulationDissolution testingSolubilityTartratesDissolutionChromatographyChemistryHydrogen-Ion ConcentrationStomach emptyingBetaineDrug LiberationSolubilityGastrointestinal AbsorptionDrug DesignMolecular MedicineWeak baseMolecular Pharmaceutics
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Viscosity-mediated negative food effect on oral absorption of poorly-permeable drugs with an absorption window in the proximal intestine: In vitro ex…

2014

Concomitant food intake can diminish oral absorption of drugs with limited permeability and an absorption window in the proximal intestine, due to viscosity-mediated decrease in dosage form disintegration time and drug dissolution rate. Three poorly-permeable drugs (atenolol, metformin hydrochloride, and furosemide) exhibiting negative food effect, and one highly-soluble and highly-permeable (metoprolol tartrate), serving as a negative control, were selected for the study. In vitro and in silico tools were used to evaluate the influence of media viscosity on drug bioperformance under fasted and fed conditions. The obtained results demonstrated that increased medium viscosity in the presence…

Absorption (pharmacology)DrugMetoprolol Tartratemedia_common.quotation_subjectPharmaceutical ScienceAdministration OralPharmaceutical formulationPharmacologyDosage formPermeabilityFood-Drug InteractionsPharmacokineticsPoorly-permeable drugsFurosemideHumansDissolution testingSolubilityDisintegrationmedia_commonChromatographyChemistryViscosityReproducibility of ResultsHydrogen-Ion ConcentrationFood effectMetforminAtenololIntestinal AbsorptionSolubilityFoodDissolutionAbsorption simulationEuropean journal of pharmaceutical sciences : official journal of the European Federation for Pharmaceutical Sciences
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Optimised procedures for the reversed-phase liquid chromatographic analysis of formulations containing tricyclic antidepressants.

2003

The chromatographic behaviour (retention, selectivity, peak shape and resolution) of seven tricyclic antidepressants (TCAs), amitryptiline, clomipramine, doxepin, imipramine, maprotiline, nortryptiline and trimipramine, was examined. Conventional unendcapped Cs and C18 columns and an endcapped XTerra MS C18 column recommended for the analysis of basic compounds were used together with acetonitrile-water and micellar sodium dodecylsulfate (SDS)-pentanol mobile phases. The two best combinations were XTerra C18/acetonitrile, which yielded the largest efficiencies and resolution, and C8/SDS-pentanol, which eliminated the peak tails that were still observed with the XTerra C18 column. Both the s…

AcetonitrilesResolution (mass spectrometry)Clinical BiochemistryPharmaceutical ScienceCapsulesAntidepressive Agents TricyclicSensitivity and SpecificityDosage formAnalytical Chemistrychemistry.chemical_compoundDrug DiscoverymedicineAcetonitrileSpectroscopyChromatography High Pressure LiquidChromatographyExtraction (chemistry)Reproducibility of ResultsReversed-phase chromatographyDoxepinTrimipraminechemistry1-PentanolSolventsmedicine.drugTabletsJournal of pharmaceutical and biomedical analysis
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