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Title: Effervescent microspheres and method for making
them
United States Patent: 6,210,711
Inventors: Aiache; Jean-Marc (Clermont-Ferrand, FR);
Gauthier; Pascale (Clermont-Ferrand, FR); Bougaret; Joel (Lanta, FR)
Assignee: Pierre Fabre Medicament (Boulogne-Billancourt,
FR)
Appl. No.: 341780
Filed: August 13, 1999
PCT Filed: January 15, 1998
PCT NO: PCT/FR98/00070
371 Date: August 13, 1999
102(e) Date: August 13, 1999
PCT PUB.NO.: WO98/31342
PCT PUB. Date: July 23, 1998
Foreign Application Priority Data: Jan 16, 1997[FR] (97
00394)
Abstract
The invention concerns multilayer microspheres containing an acid
substance, a basic substance, and a water-soluble isolating agent which,
when it dissolves in water, after almost instant effervescence, brings
about a homogeneous dispersion of active principal(s) which is present in
the acid and basic substances. The invention also concerns a method for
preparing such microspheres by rotational granulation on a fluid air bed
associated with a system of tangential spraying of the wetting liquid.
Description of the Invention
The present application is a U.S. National Application
filed under 35 USC 371 of PCT/FR98/00070, filed Jan. 15, 1998 based upon
French application Ser. No. 97/00394 filed Jan. 16, 1997.
The present invention relates to multilayer effervescent microspheres and
to a process for preparing such microspheres.
The term "microsphere" will be intended to refer to
microgranules formed of a support material consisting of a matrix in which
the active principle(s), to which auxiliary substances are optionally
added, is (are) dispersed. In accordance with the European Pharmacopea
monograph on spheres, microspheres have an average diameter of less than
1.0 mm and greater than or equal to 1.0 .mu.m. They are generally intended
for oral or parenteral administration and are used either as constituents
of pharmaceutical form, such as tablets, or in their natural form combined
or otherwise with other excipients, and distributed or otherwise in unit
doses, such as sachets, gel-capsules or powder for injectable preparation.
The effervescent forms for pharmaceutical use described in the prior art
exclusively comprise granules and tablets obtained by compressing these
granules.
These effervescent forms are intended to be dispersed in water before
absorption. Their breakdown is ensured by a release of carbon dioxide
resulting from the action of an acid--generally an organic acid, citric
acid being the one most commonly used--on a base--generally a carbonate
such as sodium bicarbonate, potassium bicarbonate, lithium bicarbonate,
calcium carbonate, magnesium carbonate or lysine carbonate to avoid the
introduction of sodium.
The known effervescent forms also comprise diluent adjuvants (generally
sugars), binders, sweeteners and flavorings.
Most of the standard processes for preparing effervescent forms comprise a
step of granulating powder, either via a wet route or via a dry route.
Despite the difficulties present therein, wet granulation is the method
most commonly used.
According to a first variant described in the "Journal of
Pharmaceutical Sciences, 1964, 53, 1524-25", the acidic and basic
substances, the active principle(s) and the adjuvants are mixed together
in a fluidized air bed. The granulation is initiated by spraying the
powder with distilled water or an aqueous diphosphate solution. The water
thus sprayed on initiates an effervescence reaction which allows the
creation of bonds between the particles of powder. The water is sprayed on
until the granules reach the desired size. The drawback of this method is
the lack of reproducibility of the results due to poor control of the
effervescence reaction.
Patent application EP 673,644 proposes to control the effervescence
reaction of the process described in the above reference, by maintaining
the moisture content of the air supplied to the fluidized air bed between
0 and 1 g/m3, on the one hand, and by evaporating the nebulized
water at the surface of the granules being formed while at the same time
continuing the spraying with water, on the other hand. The granules are
dried once the desired size has been reached. This application describes
the use of water or of an aqueous-alcoholic mixture as wetting liquid.
According to a second variant described in patent EP 369,228, the acidic
and basic substances are granulated separately and then mixed together
after drying. This process is expensive to implement.
In patent application WO 96/19982 which describes a process for preparing
effervescent compositions containing ibuprofen, the granulation step
concerns only the alkaline substance. According to this process, the
granulated alkaline substance is mixed with pulverulent ibuprofen.
Dry granulation includes two phases: compression of the powder and
grinding-screening of the powder tablets. This process is of little
interest for the preparation of effervescent forms due to the chemical
nature of the products inducing bonding phenomena.
Patent FR 2,552,308 describes a process for preparing an effervescent
mixture by a method which does not involve a granulation step.
According to the described process, the effervescent mixture contains at
least one crystalline solid organic acid and at least one carbonate
releasing CO2 in the reaction with the organic acid and is
characterized in that the acid crystals bear a coating containing calcium
carbonate which adheres to the surface of the acid crystals by means of
the bonding layer formed by partial react-on of the calcium carbonate of
the coating with a surface layer of each acid crystal. The mixture is
prepared by heating the organic acid in ethanol and water to about 60oC.
in a mixer at a pressure of about 0.1 bar or less and by introducing the
calcium carbonate which is left to react until the pressure has risen to
about 0.9 bar.
The present invention relates to multilayer effervescent microspheres
containing an acidic substance, a basic substance and a water-soluble
isolating agent whose dissolution in water leads, after almost immediate
effervescence, to a solution or a homogeneous dispersion of active
principle.
According to a first variant, the water-soluble isolating agent is
dispersed in the entire bulk of each microsphere, the latter having a
two-layer structure: a layer of acidic substance in which is dispersed the
water-soluble isolating agent and a layer of alkaline substance in which
is dispersed the water-soluble isolating agent.
According to a second variant, the water-soluble isolating agent is in the
form of a thin film separating the acidic and alkaline substances. In this
case, each microsphere has a three-layer structure: a layer of acidic
substance and a layer of alkaline substance separated by a layer of
water-soluble isolating agent.
Whether the microspheres have a two-layer or three-layer structure, the
water-soluble isolating agent serves two purposes; it acts as a binder and
as an isolating barrier intended to avoid an effervescence reaction
between the alkaline substance and the acidic substance during the
preparation process but also during storage of the microspheres,
irrespective of the storage conditions.
The water-soluble isolating agent is chosen from polyvinylpyrrolidone,
hydroxypropyl cellulose, methyl cellulose, lactose and sucrose.
The present invention also relates to a process for preparing the
effervescent microspheres described above using the method of rotary
granulation in a fluidized air bed.
The advantage of rotary granulation applied to these effervescent
compositions is the continuous linking of the operations in one and the
same chamber which, as a result of the components used and certain
precautions taken, induces no effervescence. Furthermore, this rotary
granulation technique allows the relative proportions of the various
compounds to be modified, in particular the relative molar proportions of
the acidic and basic fractions.
Specifically, the process according to the invention makes it possible
advantageously to obtain effervescent forms whose relative proportion of
alkaline and acidic fractions is less than the stoichiometric proportion
implemented in the prior art for effervescent tablets manufactured by the
granulation method, without the quality of the effervescence being
adversely affected.
In particular, the relative proportion of the alkaline and acidic
fractions implemented in the context of the process according to the
invention is less than 0.6, in particular less than 0.25.
All the steps of the process according to the invention are carried out
under atmospheric pressure, without any specific dehydration system or any
specific precautions.
The apparatus used to carry out the process for preparing the effervescent
microspheres is, for example, apparatus constructed by the company Glatt,
onto which a rotor tank is fitted.
Such an item of apparatus is described in patent EP 0,505,319, which we
include, by way of reference, in the present application.
A subject of the present invention is, firstly, a process for preparing
effervescent microspheres which have a two-layer structure according to
the first variant described above.
Said process is performed by rotary granulation in a fluidized air bed
combined with a system for spraying powder and a system for the tangential
spraying of wetting liquid. The process comprises two continuous steps, a
first step of spheronization of microspheres using a powder A and a second
step of spheronization of a powder B on the microspheres of powder A, one
of the powders A and B being acidic and the other alkaline and it being
possible for each of them to contain or consist of one or more active
principles.
During the first spheronization, the powder A is placed in the moving
rotary granulation tank and suspended in the air bed. The components of
the powder A are mixed together for five minutes and the air inlet
temperature is stabilized to a temperature To.
The powder A thus blended is sprayed with a wetting liquid containing the
water-soluble isolating agent. The microspheres of powder A obtained are
dried by bringing the air inlet temperature to Ts and are then optionally
screened using a 1000 .mu.m screen. During the second spheronization, the
air inlet temperature is brought to To. The powder B and the wetting
liquid containing the water-soluble isolating agent are then
simultaneously sprayed onto the dried powder A microspheres obtained
previously. The powder B is sprayed by means of the powder spraying system
installed on the Glatt apparatus. The two-layer microspheres obtained are
dried by bringing the air inlet temperature to Ts. After drying, the
microspheres must be packaged quickly, but a small amount of moisture
uptake does not harm the storage.
During the two spheronizations, the wetting liquid containing the
water-soluble isolating agent is the same, for example
polyvinylpyrrolidone (PVP) dissolved in an alcohol or an aqueous-alcoholic
mixture, in particular PVP dissolved to 4% by weight in ethanol at 60% by
volume.
The two-layer microspheres obtained according to the process of the
invention have an average particle size of between 20 and 500 .mu.m.
A subject of the present invention is also a process for preparing
effervescent microspheres which have a three-layer structure according to
the second variant described above.
Said process is performed according to the method of rotary granulation in
a fluidized air bed combined with a system for the tangential spraying of
wetting liquid.
The process comprises three continuous steps, a first step of
spheronization of microspheres using a powder A, a second step of
spheronization of a water-soluble isolating agent on the microspheres of
powder A, and then a third step of spheronization of a powder B on the
microspheres A protected with a film of water-soluble isolating agent, one
of the powders A and B being acidic and the other alkaline and it being
possible for each of them to contain or consist of one or more active
principles.
During the first spheronization, the powder A containing an added binder,
for example PVP, is placed in the moving tank and suspended in the air
bed. The components of the powder A are mixed together for five minutes
and the air inlet temperature is stabilized to To. The powder A thus
blended is sprayed with a wetting liquid. The microspheres of powder A
obtained are dried by bringing the air inlet temperature to Ts. During the
second spheronization, the air inlet temperature is brought to To. The
water-soluble isolating agent is added directly to the tank and the
wetting liquid sprayed until microspheres of powder A which are coated
with a film of water-soluble isolating agent are obtained, and are dried
by bringing the air inlet temperature to Ts. After drying, the coated
microspheres are screened and the powder B is then added directly to the
rotary granulation tank when the air inlet temperature has stabilized at
To. The three-layer microspheres are obtained by spraying the preceding
microspheres with a wetting liquid. The three-layer microspheres obtained
are dried by bringing the air inlet temperature to Ts. After drying, the
microspheres must be packaged quickly, but a small amount of moisture
uptake does not harm the storage.
During the first two steps, the wetting liquid is, for example, an
aqueous-alcoholic solution, in particular ethanol at 60% by volume. During
the final step, the water-soluble isolating agent can be introduced by
means of the powder B, in which case the wetting liquid used will be the
same as during the first two steps, or alternatively the isolating agent
is introduced by means of the wetting liquid, which will be an alcoholic
or aqueous-alcoholic solution containing the isolating agent, for example
PVP dissolved to 4% by weight in ethanol at 60% by volume.
The three-layer microspheres obtained according to the process of the
invention have an average particle size of between 200 and 1000 .mu.m.
According to the process for manufacturing microspheres, whether they are
two-layer or three-layer microspheres, the powder of alkaline nature
contains a sodium bicarbonate or any other carbonate usually used in the
preparation of effervescent forms, such as lithium hydrogen carbonate,
monosodium carbonate, lithium glycine carbonate, monopotassium carbonate,
calcium carbonate, magnesium carbonate; one or more active principles if
the latter have alkaline properties; whereas the powder of acidic nature
contains an organic acid, for example citric acid or a compound used as
active principle, for example ascorbic acid, acetylleucine and/or one or
more active principles if the latter have acidic properties.
The acidic and alkaline powders can also contain a diluent, for example
lactose or Glucidex; flavorings and sweeteners, for example orange
flavoring, citric acid, sodium saccharinate; various excipients.
According to one embodiment of the invention, the powder A is of alkaline
nature and the powder B is of acidic nature.
According to another embodiment of the invention, the powder B is of
alkaline nature and the powder A of acidic nature.
The wetting liquid is sprayed by means of a nozzle 1.2 mm in diameter, at
an average flow rate of between 10 and 30 g/min. The air inlet temperature
of the fluidized bed is between 55 and 650C during the spheronization
steps (To) and between 75 and 85oC. during the drying phases
(Ts).
The microspheres obtained according to the process of the invention
contain 5 to 75% of alkaline substance, 10 to 75% of acidic substance, 3
to 15% of water-soluble isolating agent, 5 to 50% of diluent and 1 to 30%
of flavorings and sweeteners.
The relative humidity of the microspheres obtained according to the
process of the invention, measured for fifteen minutes by the infrared
balance method at 90oC., is between 1 and 2% at the rotary
granulation tank outlet.
The overall yield for the process is calculated from the fraction of
particles smaller than 2500 .mu.m in size, the working yield of the
spheres corresponds to the fraction of particles between 200 and 1000 .mu.m,
for the process for preparing three-layer microspheres, between 20 and 500
.mu.m for the process for preparing two-layer microspheres.
The feasibility of the process according to the invention is evaluated
according to the ease with which the microspheres are obtained, the speed
of production of a batch and the yield for each step.
Analysis of the batches includes particle size analysis of a sample of 100
g of spheres by the superimposed screens method (sample obtained from the
total fraction of a batch), after which a morphological study of the
microspheres obtained, relating to the overall appearance, sphericity,
cohesion and uniformity of the particles, is carried out by examination
with a binocular magnifying glass.
According to one variant of the invention, the two-layer or three-layer
effervescent microspheres are manufactured by the mounting technique
combined with a system for the tangential spraying of wetting liquid. The
powder A and the powder B can be mounted successively on spheres of active
principle coated with water-soluble isolating agent, or on neutral
spheres.
Claim 1 of 22 Claims
What is claimed is:
1. Process for preparing multilayer effervescent microspheres containing
an acidic substance, a basic substance, and a water-soluble isolating
agent which upon dissolution in water leads, after almost immediate
effervescence, to a solution or a homogeneous dispersion of active
principle(s), wherein the acidic and basic substances contain or consist
of active principle(s), which employs the method of rotary granulation in
a fluidized air bed.
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