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Title: Orodispersible solid
pharmaceutical form
United States Patent: 7,201,922
Issued: April 10, 2007
Inventors: Serpelloni;
Michel (Beuvry-les-Bethune, FR)
Assignee: Roquette Freres (Lestrem,
FR)
Appl. No.: 10/167,016
Filed: June 11, 2002
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Woodbury College's
Master of Science in Law
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Abstract
The subject of the invention is an
orodispersible solid pharmaceutical form characterized in that it
comprises: granules consisting of lactose and starch which have been
codried; at least one active substance. The subject of the invention is
also the use of codried granules consisting of lactose and starch for the
preparation of orodispersible solid pharmaceutical forms.
Description of the Invention
FIELD OF THE
INVENTION
The subject of the invention is a solid
pharmaceutical form which disintegrates rapidly in the mouth.
More precisely, the subject of the invention is an orodispersible
pharmaceutical form comprising at least one active substance and a
particular excipient.
Even though the European Pharmacopoeia 2001 does not yet list the
orodispersible dosage form among the numerous existing galenic dosage
forms, the term "orodispersible tablet" is now accepted. It corresponds to
the following definition:
"Tablet which, when placed in the mouth, disperses rapidly therein before
swallowing it" (Pharmeuropa, Vol. 10, No. 4, December 1998, p. 547, the
content of which is herein incorporated by reference).
The orodispersible dosage form has the characteristic feature of requiring
neither water nor chewing during its administration. It disintegrates in
the presence of saliva, generally in less than a minute.
In the design of orodispersible dosage forms, two dosage forms can be
produced: the dosage forms which break down: obtained most often by
freeze-drying, these very porous dosage forms contain soluble excipients
whose dissolution causes the breakdown of the structure. the dosage forms
which explode: obtained by compression, the mechanism involved in the
disintegration of these dosage forms in the mouth is ascribed to the
disintegrating agents which they contain.
In the present invention, there is interest only in the dosage forms
obtained by compression, and more particularly in the dosage forms
obtained by direct compression.
BACKGROUND OF THE
INVENTION
Numerous oral dosage forms are currently
commercially available but they do not always meet the convenience of
users: tablets for swallowing require the taking of water, gums and
tablets for chewing involve use of the teeth.
Many people have difficulties swallowing conventional tablets which are
often of non negligible size. The problems linked to the taking of
medicaments (breathlessness, suffocation by obstruction of the throat) are
often responsible for poor compliance with the dosages, or even a stopping
of the treatment. These problems relate in particular to children, elderly
persons, patients suffering from deglutition disorders or pathologies
affecting saliva secretion.
The orodispersible dosage forms attempt to overcome these disadvantages by
their simple mode of administration. By virtue of a rapid disintegration,
which is possible in the presence of saliva, the orodispersible tablet is
reduced, within a few tens of seconds after its administration, to small
size aggregates which are easy to swallow. In the case of the formulation
of a dosage form with immediate release of active agent, oral dispersion
allows a more rapid availability in the body compared with the dosage
forms to be swallowed by increasing the surface area for exchange with
physiological fluids. An increased bioavailability of the active agent
results therefrom.
Oral dispersibility does not correspond to a single phenomenon. The
mechanism of disintegration is thought to have several origins, which are
the swelling of a disintegrating agent in the presence of saliva, the
development of a capillary network promoted by the presence of pores in
the tablet, the tendency for the particles to return to their initial
form, the heat released by the wetting of the constituents which increases
the air pressure, and the repulsive force between the particles in contact
with water. Regardless of the theory involved, the penetration of water is
the first phase of the disintegration. The constituents of the
orodispersible tablets should therefore promote it or at least not hinder
it. In terms of formulation and manufacture, this therefore involves
finding a compromise between the physical characteristics of the tablet
and the chemical properties of the excipients.
Numerous rapidly dissolving dosage forms are described in the prior art.
U.S. Pat. No. 5,464,632 describes a technology based on the film-coating
of the active ingredient, which is intended not only to mask the taste of
the active molecules but also to create an insoluble coating enhancing the
rate of disintegration of the tablet. Indeed, the solubilization of the
excipients at the surface constitutes a brake on the penetration of water
into the tablets by increasing the viscosity of the incoming liquid. The
formula uses a diluent (polyols), a disintegrating agent (crosslinked
polyvinylpyrrolidone) and lubricants and customary adjuvants.
The document PCT/FR00/00495 (WO 00/51568) describes the use of hydrophobic
lubricants whose negative action on the penetration of water is
compensated by the use of a permeabilizing agent such as silica, in order
to increase the affinity of the tablets for water. The formula also
comprises a diluent and a disintegrating agent.
Document WO 00/57857 describes, for its part, the use of an effervescent
agent coupled with a disintegrating agent so as to enhance the
disintegration in the mouth. The formula comprises, in addition, a diluent
which is not directly compressible.
Finally, the document FR 98/09221 (FR 2,781,152) describes a technology
based on the synergy between a disintegrating agent and a type C acrylic
polymer which leads to a considerably enhanced rate of disintegration.
All these technologies have in common the use of at least one
disintegrating agent also called "superdisintegrant". This term groups
together compounds whose disintegrating power is high. Among the most
efficient, there are in particular KOLLIDON.RTM. CL (crosslinked
polyvinylpyrrolidone marketed by BASF), EXPLOTAB.RTM. (carboxymethylated
starch marketed by PENWEST), and AC DI SOL.RTM. (crosslinked
carboxymethylcellulose sodium marketed by FMC). This superdisintegrant
agent is essential in the formulation of orodispersible tablets, and
should be used together with a direct compression excipient.
The formulator is then forced to prepare physical mixtures of different
excipients necessary for the formulation of orodispersible tablets.
However, the physical mixtures impose strict constraints on their
production and their handling to ensure homogeneity of the mixture and the
absence of demixing, properties which are essential in practice for
obtaining tablets of constant quality, and these mixtures do not make it
possible to prepare tablets of variable hardness as a function of the
intended application. Indeed, the results obtained with such mixtures give
rise to tablets of very high hardness, completely unsuitable for a rapid
disintegration in the buccal cavity.
SUMMARY OF THE
INVENTION
The aim of the invention is therefore to
remedy this disadvantage and to provide an orodispersible solid
pharmaceutical dosage form, having a pleasant texture, while using a
simple excipient, of natural origin, which disintegrates rapidly in the
mouth, and having an advantageous taste neutrality.
The Applicant has had the merit of finding that this aim could be achieved
if a particular excipient capable of serving simultaneously as binder,
disintegrant and diluent is used to prepare the said solid dosage form,
while allowing the preparation of solid dosage forms over a wide range of
hardness.
DETAILED DESCRIPTION
OF THE INVENTION
The subject of the invention is therefore
an orodispersible solid pharmaceutical form characterized in that it
comprises: granules consisting of lactose and starch which have been
codried; at least one active substance.
The subject of the invention is also the use of granules consisting of
lactose and starch which have been codried for the preparation of
orodispersible solid pharmaceutical dosage forms.
The expression solid pharmaceutical dosage form is understood to mean for
the purposes of the invention any preparation in the form of tablets,
which are obtained by densification of a powder. These solid dosage forms
essentially consist of inert materials grouped under the term of
excipients, and comprise one or more pharmaceutical active substances.
The term "orodispersible" is understood to mean solid dosage forms which
disintegrate in the buccal cavity in less than 3 minutes, and preferably
in less than one minute.
The said granules contained in the solid dosage forms in accordance with
the invention correspond to the compositions described in Patent
Application EP 00/402159.8 of which the Assignee is proprietor, and in its
US counterpart, U.S. Ser. No. 09/905,596, now U.S. Pat. No. 6,770,368, the
contents of which are herein incorporated by reference. These granules are
characterized by a spherical structure and an advantageous compressiblity
and are marketed under the name STARLAC.RTM. by the Assignee and by the
company MEGGLE GmbH.
The disintegrating properties of the said granules are known for tablets
placed in large volumes of liquid, with stirring. It is particularly
surprising that such granules used for the manufacture of orodispersible
dosage forms can give particularly satisfactory results in terms of
disintegration in the mouth, this being for two reasons.
The first is based on the observation that the excipients least soluble in
water are the most appropriate for the formulation of orodispersible
tablets (solubilization, causing an increase in the viscosity of the
water, is a brake on its penetration into the tablets). However, the said
granules comprise a large fraction of lactose which is very soluble in
water. Furthermore, the starch included in the said granules is not a "superdisintegrant"
agent as used and described in the orodispersible dosage forms of the
prior art.
The second is based on the observation that the disintegration properties
of an excipient (used in a tablet), evaluated in water by conventional
methods, cannot be extrapolated to the behavior of the same tablet in
vivo, in saliva. Indeed, the rates of disintegration in water are measured
(according to the European Pharmacopoeia) in a quantity of water which is
sufficiently large not to reach saturation in terms of solubilization,
whereas "in vivo", by virtue of the small volume of saliva, the excipients
are at saturation. Furthermore, the stirring to which the tablets are
subjected during the customary test does not reflect the disintegration in
the mouth. The Applicant has thus observed during comparative trials that
some excipients known as good disintegrants were not suitable for the
preparation of orodispersible dosage forms. Conversely, some excipients
which disintegrate moderately in water can have advantageous properties in
vivo.
The Applicant then found that the said granules surprisingly conferred on
the tablets very good capacities to disintegrate in the mouth, this being
for a wide range of tablet hardness, while preserving low brittleness
which is particularly remarkable. Indeed, most of the orodispersible
dosage forms of the prior art which disintegrate rapidly in the mouth are
very brittle, which results in disintegration of the tablet as soon as it
is handled and removed from its packaging.
The orodispersible pharmaceutical dosage form according to the invention,
that is to say which disintegrate in the mouth in less than one minute,
advantageously has a brittleness of less than 2%, and preferably less than
or equal to 1%. This brittleness is measured according to the
pharmaceutical technical method 2.9.7 of the European Pharmacopoeia,
3.sup.rd edition (available from European Directorate for the Quality of
Medecines EDQM, European Pharmacopoeia, 226 avenue de Colmar BP 907,
F-67029 Strasbourg Cedex 1, FRANCE; www.pheur.org), the content of which
is herein incorporated by reference.
It is particularly remarkable that the above-mentioned criteria of
orodispersibility and brittleness are observed for a wide range of tablet
hardness, that is to say for tablets having a hardness, measured with an
ERWEKA TBH 30 GMD type durometer, of between 30 and 300 newtons.
The orodispersible pharmaceutical dosage forms according to the invention
therefore constitute, for the reasons which have just been disclosed, a
novel industrial product.
To prepare these pharmaceutical dosage forms according to the invention,
the procedure is carried out as follows or in an equivalent manner.
The desired active substance(s) is (are) first of all selected. These
active substances may be chosen from a large number of pharmaceutical
active agents intended for oral administration, and in particular from the
group consisting of analgesics, antipyretics, antidiarrhoeals,
antispasmodics, antiinfectious agents, antibiotics, antivirals,
antiparasitics, digestive motility regulators, blood pressure regulators,
cardiac and coronary insufficiency regulators, cardiac rhythm regulators,
central nervous system regulators, lipid, carbohydrate and protein
metabolism regulators, bone metabolism regulators, vasculoprotective and
venotonic agents, hormone and immune system regulators, steroidal and
nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory agents, antihistamines and antiallergics,
antiasthmatics, antitusives, expectorants, mucoregulators, antiemetics,
diuretics, laxatives, cytotoxics and cytostatics, vitamin and mineral
elements, plant extracts.
In some cases, it is possible to advantageously mask the bitterness or the
unpleasant taste of the active substance, or alternatively to modify its
adsorption by film-coating or hard-coating the said active substance.
Film-coating may be carried out with various taste-masking agents known to
a person skilled in the art, such as, in particular, cellulosic polymers
(ethyl cellulose, hydroxyethyl cellulose, hydroxypropyl methyl cellulose,
hydroxypropyl cellulose, cellulose acetate, cellulose acetophthalate),
polymethacrylates marketed under the name EUDRAGIT.RTM., mixtures of
cellulosic polymers and other polymers such as, for example,
polyvinylpyrrolidone marketed under the name KOLLIDON.RTM., all these
polymers or mixtures thereof being optionally combined with plasticizers
such as in particular polyethylene glycol.
The film-coating of the active substance is carried out according to a
known process such as, for example, the fluidized bed process, in a
turbine mixer, coacervation, microencapsulation, extrusion-spheronization.
Although less common, it is also possible to use hard-coating as a
technique for coating the active substance. It is carried out according to
processes known to a person skilled in the art, using various sugars or
polyols optionally mixed with film-forming polymers.
The quantity of active substance present in the solid dosage form
according to the invention depends on the active agent chosen. Generally,
it represents 0.2 to 95%, and preferably 1 to 50% by weight of the solid
dosage form.
This active substance is mixed with the excipient consisting of starch and
lactose granules.
Preferably, these granules have a lactose/starch ratio of between 90/10
and 25/75 and still more preferably between 85/15 and 50/50.
These granules may be obtained according to several variants, and in
particular by codrying. Preferably, the said granules are obtained by
co-spray-drying lactose and starch, according to a process described in
the abovementioned patent applications.
The proportions of the said granules in the solid dosage form according to
the invention vary according to the type of medicament which it is desired
to prepare. In general, these granules represent from 20 to 99%,
preferably 40 to 98% by weight of the said solid dosage form.
It is also possible to cause the mixture thus prepared to contain one or
more compounds consisting of flavourings, lubricants, colourings and
sweeteners.
The said mixture is then formed by densification of the powder. In
particular, this operation may be carried by direct compression.
The solid dosage forms thus obtained have an orodispersibility which is
quite remarkable, regardless of their hardness and density. Indeed, the
use of lactose and starch granules in accordance with the invention allows
the formulator to choose from a very broad panel of parameters for
manufacturing solid dosage forms while being assured to finally obtain a
dosage form which is not very brittle, which disintegrates very rapidly in
the mouth, which was not allowed by the prior art excipients intended for
fast release dosage forms. Furthermore, the properties of the said
granules allow the formulator to dispense with the addition of a
superdisintegrant to the tablet formula, which is very advantageous from
the technical and economic point of view. The use according to the
invention of codried granules consisting of lactose and starch in the
manufacture of orodispersible dosage forms which disintegrate in the mouth
in less than one minute is therefore particularly innovative.
Claim 1 of 9 Claims
1. A compressed orodispersible
solid pharmaceutical composition in a solid dosage form having a ERWEKA
hardness of between 30 and 300 newtons, comprising: spherical granules
consisting essentially of co-spray-dried lactose and granular starch,
wherein the lactose/starch ratio is between 90/10 and 25/75, said granules
having a friability of less than or equal to 80%, according to a test A; at
least one pharmaceutically active substance, and wherein said composition
disintegrates in the mouth in less than one minute and has a brittleness of
less than 2%, and wherein the said granules represent 20 to 99% by weight of
said solid dosage form.
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