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Title:
Oral pulsed dose drug delivery system
United States Patent: RE41,148
Issued: February 23, 2010
Inventors: Burnside; Beth
A. (Bethesda, MD), Guo; Xiaodi (Apex, NC), Fiske; Kimberly (Downingtown,
PA), Couch; Richard A. (Bryn Mawr, PA), Treacy; Donald J. (Woodbine, MD),
Chang; Rong-Kun (Rockville, MD), Rudnic; Edward M. (North Potomac, MD),
McGuinness; Charlotte M. (Bethesda, MD)
Assignee: Shire
Laboratories, Inc. (Rockville, MD)
Appl. No.: 11/091,010
Filed: October 20, 1999
PCT Filed: October 20, 1999
PCT No.: PCT/US99/24554
371(c)(1),(2),(4) Date: July
19, 2001
PCT Pub. No.: WO00/23055
PCT Pub. Date: April 27,
2000
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Patheon
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Abstract
A multiple pulsed dose drug delivery
system for pharmaceutically active amphetamine salts, comprising an
immediate-release component and an enteric delayed-release component
wherein (1) the enteric release coating has a defined minimum thickness
and/or (2) there is a protective layer between the pharmaceutically active
amphetamine salt and the enteric release coating and/or (3) there is a
protective layer over the enteric release coating. The product can be
composed of either one or a number of beads in a dosage form, including
either capsule, tablet, or sachet method for administering the beads.
Description of the
Invention
BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
Traditionally, drug delivery systems have focused on constant/sustained
drug output with the objective of minimizing peaks and valleys of drug
concentrations in the body to optimize drug efficacy and to reduce adverse
effects. A reduced dosing frequency and improved patient compliance can
also be expected for the controlled/sustained release drug delivery
systems, compared to immediate release preparations. However, for certain
drugs, sustained release delivery is not suitable and is affected by the
following factors: First pass metabolism: Some drugs, such as .beta.
blockers, .beta.-estradiol, and salicylamide, undergo extensive first pass
metabolism and require fast drug input to saturate metabolizing enzymes in
order to minimize pre-systemic metabolism. Thus, a constant/sustained oral
method of delivery would result in reduced oral bio-availability.
Biological tolerance: Continuous release drug plasma profiles are often
accompanied by a decline in the pharmacotherapeutic effect of the drug,
e.g., biological tolerance of transdermal nitroglycerin.
Chronopharmacology and circadian rhythms: Circadian rhythms in certain
physiological functions are well established. It has been recognized that
many symptoms and onset of disease occur during specific time periods of
the 24 hour day, e.g., asthma and angina pectoris attacks are most
frequently in the morning hours (1,2). Local therapeutic need: For the
treatment of local disorders such as inflammatory bowel disease, the
delivery of compounds to the site of inflammation with no loss due to
absorption in the small intestine is highly desirable to achieve the
therapeutic effect and to minimize side effects. Gastric irritation or
drug instability in gastric fluid: For compounds with gastric irritation
or chemical instability in gastric fluid, the use of a sustained release
preparation may exacerbate gastric irritation and chemical instability in
gastric fluid. Drug absorption differences in various gastrointestinal
segments: In general, drug absorption is moderately slow in the stomach,
rapid in the small intestine, and sharply declining in the large
intestine. Compensation for changing absorption characteristics in the
gastrointestinal tract may be important for some drugs. For example, it is
rational for a delivery system to pump out the drug much faster when the
system reaches the distal segment of the intestine, to avoid the
entombment of the drug in the feces.
Pulsed dose delivery systems, prepared as either single unit or multiple
unit formulations, and which are capable of releasing the drug after a
predetermined time, have been studied to address the aforementioned
problematic areas for sustained release preparations. These same factors
are also problematic in pulsed dose formulations development. For example,
gastrointestinal transit times vary not only from patient to patient but
also within patients as a result of food intake, stress, and illness; thus
a single-unit pulsed-release system may give higher variability compared
to a multiple unit system. Additionally, drug layering or core making for
multiple unit systems is a time-consuming and hard-to-optimize process.
Particularly challenging for formulation scientists has been overcoming
two conflicting hurdles for pulsatile formulation development, i.e., lag
time and rapid release.
Various enteric materials, e.g., cellulose acetate phtalate, hydroxypropyl
methylcellulose phtalate, polyvinyl acetate phthalate, and the
EUDRAGIT.RTM. acrylic polymers, have been used as gastroresistant,
enterosoluble coatings for single drug pulse release in the intestine (3).
The enteric materials, which are soluble at higher pH values, are
frequently used for colon-specific delivery systems. Due to their
pH-dependent attributes and the uncertainty of gastric retention time,
in-vivo performance as well as inter- and intra-subject variability are
major issues for using enteric, coated systems as a time-controlled
release of drugs.
A retarding swellable hydrophilic coating has been used for oral delayed
release systems (4,5). It was demonstrated that lag time was linearly
correlated with coating weight gain and drug release was pH independent.
Hydroxypropyl methylcellulose barriers with erodible and/or gellable
characteristics formed using press coating technology for tablet dosage
forms have been described to achieve time-programmed release of drugs (6).
Barrier formulation variables, such as grade of hydroxypropyl
methylcellulose, water-soluble and water-insoluble excipients,
significantly altered the lag time and the release rate from the center
cores.
Special grades of hydroxypropyl methylcellulose, e.g., METHOLOSE.RTM.
60SH, 90SH (Shin-Etsu Ltd., Japan), and METHOCEL.RTM. F4M (Dow Chemical
Company, USA), as a hydrophilic matrix material have been used to achieve
bimodal drug release for several drugs, i.e., aspirin, ibuprofen, and
adinazolam (7). Bimodal release is characterized by a rapid initial
release, followed by a period of constant release, and finalized by a
second rapid drug release.
Tablets or capsules coated with a hydrophobic wax-surfactant layer, made
from an aqueous dispersion of carnauba wax, beeswax, polyoxyethylene
sorbitan monooleate, and hydroxypropyl methylcellulose have been used for
rapid drug release after a predetermined lag time. However, even though a
two-hour lag time was achieved for the model drug theophylline at a higher
coating level (60%), three hours were required for a complete release of
theophylline after the lag time. (8)
A sustained-release drug delivery system is described in U.S. Pat. No.
4,871,549. When this system is placed into dissolution medium or the
gastrointestinal tract, water influx and the volume expansion of the
swelling agent cause the explosion of the water permeable membrane. The
drug thus releases after a predetermined time period. The OROS.RTM.
push-pull system (Alza Company) has been developed for pulsatile delivery
of water-soluble and water-insoluble drugs (9,10), e.g. the OROS-CT.RTM.
system and is based on the swelling properties of an osmotic core
compartment which provides a pH-independent, time-controlled drug release.
The PULSINCAP.RTM. dosage form releases its drug content at either a
predetermined time or at a specific site (e.g., colon) in the
gastrointestinal tract (11). The drug formulation is contained within a
water-insoluble capsule body and is sealed with a hydrogel plug. Upon oral
administration, the capsule cap dissolves in the gastric juice and the
hydrogel plug swells. At a controlled and predetermined time point, the
swollen plug is ejected from the PULSINCAP.RTM. dosage form and the
encapsulated drug is released. A pulsatile capsule system containing
captopril with release after a nominal 5-hr period was found to perform
reproducibly in dissolution and gamma scintigraphy studies. However, in
the majority of subjects, no measurable amounts of the drug were observed
in the blood, possibly due to instability of the drug in the distal
intestine. (12)
ADDERALL.RTM. comprises a mixture of four amphetamine salts,
dextroamphetamine sulfate, dextroamphetamine saccharate, amphetamine
asparate monohydrate and amphetamine sulfate, which in combination, are
indicated for treatment of Attention Deficity Hyperactivity Disorder in
children from 3-10 years of age. One disadvantage of current treatment is
that a tablet form is commonly used which many young children have
difficulty in swallowing. Another disadvantage of current treatment is
that two separate dose are administered, one in the morning and one
approximately 4-6 hours later, commonly away from home under other than
parental supervision. This current form of treatment, therefore, requires
a second treatment which is time-consuming, inconvenient and may be
problematic for those children having difficulty in swallowing table
formulations.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
Accordingly, in view of a need for successfully administering a multiple
unit pulsed dose of amphetamine salts and mixtures thereof, the present
invention provides an oral multiple unit pulsed dose delivery system for
amphetamine salts and mixtures thereof. FIG. 1 (see Original Patent)
illustrates the desired target plasma level profile of the pharmaceutical
active contained within the delivery system.
In accordance with a preferred embodiment of the present invention, there
is provided a pharmaceutical composition for delivering one or more
pharmaceutically active amphetamine salts that includes: (a) one or more
pharmaceutically active amphetamine salts that are covered with an
immediate release coating, and (b) one or more pharmaceutically active
amphetamine salts that are covered with an enteric release coating wherein
(1) the enteric release coating has a defined minimum thickness and/or (2)
there is a protective layer between the at least one pharmaceutically
active amphetamine salt and the enteric release coating and/or (3) there
is a protective layer over the enteric release coating.
In one embodiment, the immediate release and enteric release portions of
the composition are present on the same core.
In another embodiment, the immediate release and enteric release
components are present on different cores.
It is also contemplated that the composition may include a combination of
the hereinabove referred to cores (one or more cores that include both
components on the same core and one or more cores that include only one of
the two components on the core).
The present invention provides a composition in which there is immediate
release of drug and enteric release of drug wherein the enteric release is
a pulsed release and wherein the drug includes one or more amphetamine
salts and mixtures thereof.
The immediate release component releases the pharmaceutical agent in a
pulsed dose upon oral administration of the delivery system.
The enteric release coating layer retards or delays the release of the
pharmaceutical active or drug for a specified time period ("lag time")
until a predetermined time, at which time the release of the drug is rapid
and complete, i.e., the entire dose is released within about 30-60 minutes
under predetermined environmental conditions, i.e. a particular location
within the gastrointestinal tract.
The delay or lag time will take into consideration factors such as transit
times, food effects, inflammatory bowel disease, use of antacids or other
medicaments which alter the pH of the GI tract.
In a preferred embodiment, the lag time period is only time-dependent,
i.e., pH independent. The lag time is preferably within 4 to 6 hours after
oral administration of the delivery system.
In one aspect, the present invention is directed to a composition that
provides for enteric release of at least one pharmaceutically active
amphetamine salt, including at least one pharmaceutically active
amphetamine salt that is coated with an enteric coating wherein (1) the
enteric release coating has a defined minimum thickness and/or (2) there
is a protective layer between the at least one pharmaceutically active
amphetamine salt and the enteric release coating and/or (3) there is a
protective layer over the enteric release coating.
In attempting to provide for enteric release of an amphetamine salt,
applicants found that use of an enteric release coating as generally
practiced in the art did not provide effective enteric release.
Typical enteric coating levels did not meet the above requirements for the
desired dosage profile of amphetamine salts. Using the typical amount of
enteric coating (10-20.mu.) resulted in undesired premature leakage of the
drug from the delivery system into the upper gastrointestinal tract and
thus no drug delivery at the desired location in the gastrointestinal
tract after the appropriate lag time. Thus this coating did not meet the
requirements for the drug release profile to provide full beneficial
therapeutic activity at the desired time.
Surprisingly, applicants found that using a thicker application of enteric
coating on the formulation allowed for the second pulsed dose to be
released only and completely at the appropriate time in the desired
predetermined area of the gastrointestinal tract, i.e., in the intestine.
This was surprising because an increase in thickness of about 5-10.mu. of
enteric coatings above a minimum thickness of about 10-20.mu. typically
does not have a significant effect on release of drug from within such
coatings. Enteric coatings typically are pH dependent and will only
dissolve/disperse when exposed to the appropriate environment. Typically,
application of a thicker coating (greater than 20.mu.) will only
marginally increase the time for complete release at the appropriate
environmental condition i.e., for a brief period of time (20 minutes).
Using the typical coating, applicants could not achieve the desired
result--rather, the coating leaked before the predetermined time in an
inappropriate environment resulting in significant loss of the therapeutic
agent.
Accordingly, in one aspect, the pulsed enteric release of the amphetamine
salts is accomplished by employing a certain minimum thickness of the
enteric coating.
In one embodiment of the invention, the pulsed dose delivery comprises a
composition which comprises one or more pharmaceutically active
amphetamine salts; an enteric coating over the one or more
pharmaceutically active amphetamine salts, wherein the thickness of the
enteric coating layer is at least 25.mu.; a further layer of one or more
pharmaceutically active amphetamine salts over the enteric coating layer;
and an immediate release layer coating. The thicker enteric coating
surprisingly provides the required delayed immediate release of the
pharmaceutically active amphetamine salt at the desired time in the
desired area of the gastrointestinal tract. FIG. 2 (see Original Patent)
illustrates a model of this delivery system.
In this aspect, the one or more pharmaceutically active amphetamine salts
can be provided within or as a part of a core seed around which the
enteric coating is applied. Alternatively, a core seed can be coated with
one or more layers of one or more pharmaceutically active amphetamine
salts.
It has further been discovered that a delayed immediate release drug
delivery can also be accomplished by coating the drug first with a
protective layer prior to applying the enteric coating.
Thus, in another embodiment, the pulsed enteric release is accomplished by
employing a protective layer between the drug and the enteric coating.
When using a protective coating, the enteric coating may be of an
increased thickness or may be of lower thickness.
Thus, in another aspect, the object of the invention is met by providing a
composition comprising one or more pharmaceutically active amphetamine
salts; a protective layer coating over the one or more pharmaceutically
active amphetamine salt layer(s), and an enteric coating layer over the
protective coating layer; a further pharmaceutically active amphetamine
salt layer and an immediate release layer coating. In a preferred
embodiment of this aspect, the thickness of the enteric coating is at
least 25.mu., and the protective layer comprises an immediate release
coating.
With respect to this embodiment of the invention, the one or more
pharmaceutically active amphetamine salts can be provided within or as a
part of a core seed, during the core seed manufacturing process, around
which the protective coating is applied. Alternatively, a core seed can be
coated with one or more layers of one or more pharmaceutically active
amphetamine salts.
In another embodiment, the pulsed enteric release is accomplished by
employing a protective layer over the enteric coating.
Accordingly, in this embodiment of the present invention, there is
provided a pulsed dose release drug delivery system comprising one or more
pharmaceutically active amphetamine salts; an enteric coating layer over
the pharmaceutically active amphetamine salt layer(s); and a protective
layer over the enteric coating; a second pharmaceutically active
amphetamine salt layer; and an immediate release layer coating.
In one aspect of this embodiment, the protective layer is comprised of one
or more components, which includes an immediate release layer and a
modifying layer. The modifying layer is preferably comprised of a semi
water-permeable polymer. Applicants have surprisingly found that a
semi-permeable polymer coating used in combination with an immediate
release layer coating provided a delayed pulsed release drug delivery
profile when layered over the enteric coating.
Thus, in this embodiment, the protective layer comprises a semi-permeable
polymer and an immediate release coating layer. In a preferred embodiment,
the modifying layer comprises a first layer of a semi-permeable polymer
which is adjacent to the enteric coating layer and a second coating layer
over the semi-permeable polymer coating layer comprising an immediate
release polymer coating layer.
In one aspect of this embodiment, a semi-permeable polymer, which may
comprise a low water-permeable pH-insensitive polymer, is layered onto the
outer surface of the enteric layer, in order to obtain prolonged delayed
release time. This semi-permeable polymer coating controls the erosion of
the pH-sensitive enteric polymer in an alkaline pH environment in which a
pH-sensitive polymer will dissolve rapidly. Another pH-sensitive layer may
be applied onto the surface of a low water-permeability layer to further
delay the release time.
In a still further aspect of the invention, in addition to a protective
layer, the composition comprises an acid which is incorporated into the
pharmaceutical active layer or coated onto the surface of the active layer
to reduce the pH value of the environment around the enteric polymer
layer. The acid layer may also be applied on the outer layer of the
pH-sensitive enteric polymer layer, followed by a layer of low
water-permeability polymer. The release of the active thus may be delayed
and the dissolution rate may be increased in an alkaline environment.
In a further embodiment, the protective coating may be used both over the
drug and over the enteric coating.
With respect of this embodiment of the invention, the one or more
pharmaceutically active amphetamine salts can be provided within or as a
part of a core seed, during the core seed manufacturing process, around
which the enteric coating is applied. Alternatively, a core seed can be
coated with one or more layers of one or more pharmaceutically active
amphetamine salts.
The drug delivery system of the present invention as described herein
preferably comprises one or a number of beads or beadlets in a dosage
form, either capsule, tablet, sachet or other method of orally
administering the beads.
DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION
The present invention comprises a core or starting seed, either prepared
or commercially available product. The cores or starting seeds can be
sugar spheres; spheres made from microcrystalline cellulose and any
suitable drug crystals.
The materials that can be employed in making drug-containing pellets are
any of those commonly used in pharmaceutics and should be selected on the
basis of compatibility with the active drug and the physicochemical
properties of the pellets. The additives except active drugs are chosen
below as examples.
Binders such as cellulose derivatives such as methylcellulose,
hydroxyethyl cellulose, hydroxypropyl cellulose, hydroxypropyl
methylcellulose, polyvinylpyrrolidone, polyvinylpyrrolidone/vinyl acetate
copolymer and the like.
Disintegration agents such as corn starch, pregelatinized starch,
cross-linked carboxymethylcellulose (AC-DI-SOL.RTM.), sodium starch
glycolate (EXPLOTAB.RTM.), cross-linked polyvinylpyrrolidone (PLASDONE
XL.RTM.), and any disintegration agents used in tablet preparations.
Filling agents such as lactose, calcium carbonate, calcium phosphate,
calcium sulfate, microcrystalline cellulose, dextran, starches, sucrose,
xylitol, lactitol, mannitol, sorbitol, sodium chloride, polyethylene
glycol, and the like.
Surfactants such as sodium lauryl sulfate, sorbitan monooleate,
polyoxyethylene sorbitan monooleate, bile salts, glyceryl monostearate,
PLURONIC.RTM. line (BASF), and the like.
Solubilizers such as citric acid, succinic acid, fumaric acid, malic acid,
tartaric acid, maleic acid, glutaric acid sodium bicarbonate and sodium
carbonate and the like.
Stabilizers such as any antioxidation agents, buffers, acids, and the
like, can also be utilized.
Methods of manufacturing the core include a. Extrusion-Spheronization--Drug(s)
and other additives are granulated by addition of a binder solution. The
wet mass is passed through an extruder equipped with a certain size
screen. The extrudates are spheronized in a marumerizer. The resulting
pellets are dried and sieved for further applications. b. High-Shear
Granulation--Drug(s) and other additives are dry-mixed and then the
mixture is wetted by addition of a binder solution in a high
shear-granulator/mixer. The granules are kneaded after wetting by the
combined actions of mixing and milling. The resulting granules or pellets
are dried and sieved for further applications. c. Solution or Suspension
Layering--A drug solution or dispersion with or without a binder is
sprayed onto starting seeds with a certain particle size in a fluid bed
processor or other suitable equipment. The drug thus is coated on the
surface of the starting seeds. The drug-loaded pellets are dried for
further applications.
For purposes of the present invention, the core particles have a diameter
in the range of about 50-1500 microns; preferably 100-800 microns.
These particles can then be coated in a fluidized bed apparatus with an
alternating sequence of coating layers.
The core may be coated directly with a layer or layers of at least one
pharmaceutically active amphetamine salts and/or the pharmaceutically
active amphetamine salt may be incorporated into the core material.
Pharmaceutical active amphetamine salts contemplated to be within the
scope of the present invention include amphetamine base, all chemical and
chiral derivatives and salts thereof; methylphenidate, all chemical and
chiral derivatives and salts thereof; phenylpropanolamine and its salts;
and all other compounds indicated for the treatment of attention deficit
hyperactivity disorder (ADHD).
A protective layer may be added on top of the pharmaceutical active
containing layer and also may be provided between active layers. A
separation or protective layer may be added onto the surface of the
active-loaded core, and then the enteric layer is coated thereupon.
Another active layer may also be added to the enteric layer to deliver an
initial dose.
A protective coating layer may be applied immediately outside the core,
either a drug-containing core or a drug-layered core, by conventional
coating techniques such as pan coating or fluid bed coating using
solutions of polymers in water or suitable organic solvents or by using
aqueous polymer dispersions. Suitable materials for the protective layer
include cellulose derivatives such as hydroxyethyl cellulose,
hydroxypropyl cellulose, hydroxypropyl methylcellulose,
polyvinylpyrrolidone, polyvinylpyrrolidone/vinyl acetate copolymer, ethyl
cellulose aqueous dispersions (AQUACOAT.RTM., SURELEASE.RTM.),
EUDRAGIT.RTM. RL 30D, OPADRY.RTM. and the like. The suggested coating
levels are from 1 to 6%, preferably 2-4% (w/w).
The enteric coating layer is applied onto the cores with or without seal
coating by conventional coating techniques, such as pan coating or fluid
bed coating using solutions of polymers in water or suitable organic
solvents or by using aqueous polymer dispersions. All commercially
available pH-sensitive polymers are included. The pharmaceutical active is
not released in the acidic stomach environment of approximately below pH
4.5, but not limited to this value. The pharmaceutical active should
become available when the pH-sensitive layer dissolves at the greater pH,
after a certain delayed time; or after the unit passes through the
stomach. The preferred delay time is in the range of two to six hours.
Enteric polymers include cellulose acetate phthalate, Cellulose acetate
trimellitate, hydroxypropyl methylcellulose phtalate, polyvinyl acetate
phtalate, carboxymethylethylcellulose, co-polymerized methacrylic acid/methacrylic
acid methyl esters such as, for instance, materials known under the trade
name EUDRAGIT.RTM. L12.5, L100, or EUDRAGIT.RTM. S12.5, S100 or similar
compounds used to obtain enteric coatings. Aqueous collodial polymer
dispersions or re-dispersions can be also applied, e.g. EUDRAGIT.RTM. L
30D-55, EUDRAGIT.RTM. L100-55, EUDRAGIT.RTM. S100, EUDRAGIT.RTM.
preparation 4110D (Rohm Pharma); AQUATERIC.RTM., AQUACOAT.RTM. CPD 30
(FMC); KOLLICOAT MAE.RTM. 30D and 30DP (BASF); EASTACRYL.RTM. 30D (Eastman
Chemical).
The enteric polymers used in this invention can be modified by mixing with
other known coating products that are not pH sensitive. Examples of such
coating pro ducts include the neutral methacrylic acid esters with a small
portion of trimethylammonioethyl methacrylate chloride, sold currently
under the trade names EUDRAGIT.RTM. RS and EUDRAGIT.RTM. RL; a neutral
ester dispersion without any functional groups, sold under the trade names
EUDRAGIT.RTM. NE30D; and other pH independent coating products.
The modifying component of the protective layer used over the enteric
coating can include a water penetration barrier layer (semipermeable
polymer) which can be successively coated after the enteric coating to
reduce the water penetration rate through the enteric coating layer and
thus increase the lag time of the drug release. Sustained-release coatings
commonly known to one skilled in the art can be used for this purpose by
conventional coating techniques such as pan coating or fluid bed coating
using solutions of polymers in water or suitable organic solvents or by
using aqueous polymer dispersions. For example, the following materials
can be used, but not limited to: Cellulose acetate, Cellulose acetate
butyrate, Cellulose acetate propionate, Ethyl cellulose, Fatty acids and
their esters, Waxes, zein, and aqueous polymer dispersions such as
EUDRAGIT.RTM. RS and SURELEASE.RTM., cellulose acetate latex. The
combination of above polymers and hydrophilic polymers such as
Hydroxyethyl cellulose, Hydroxypropyl cellulose (KLUCEL.RTM., Hercules
Corp.), Hydroxypropyl methylcellulose (METHOCEL.RTM., Dow Chemical Corp.),
Polyvinylpyrrolidone can also be used.
An overcoating layer can further optionally be applied to the composition
of the present invention. OPADRY.RTM., OPADRY II.RTM. (Colorcon) and
corresponding color and colorless grades from Colorcon can be used to
protect the pellets from being tacky and provide colors to the product.
The suggested levels of protective or color coating are from 1 to 6%,
preferably 2-3% (w/w).
Many ingredients can be incorporated into the overcoating formula, for
example to provide a quicker immediate release, such as plasticizers:
acetyltriethyl citrate, triethyl citrate, acetyltributyl citrate;
dibutylsebacate, triacetin, polyethylene glycols, propylene glycol and the
others; lubricants: talc, colloidal silica dioxide, magnesium stearate,
calcium stearate, titanium dioxide, magnesium silicate, and the like.
The composition, preferably in beadlet form, can be incorporated into hard
gelatin capsules, either with additional excipients, or alone. Typical
excipients to be added to a capsule formulation include, but are not
limited to: filters such as microcrystalline cellulose, soy
polysaccharides, calcium phosphate dihydrate, calcium sulfate, lactose,
sucrose, sorbitol, or any other inert filler. In addition, there can be
flow aids such as fumed silicon dioxide, silica gel, magnesium stearate,
calcium stearate or any other material imparting flow to powders. A
lubricant can further be added if necessary by using polyethylene glycol,
leucine, glyceryl behenate, magnesium stearate or calcium stearate.
The composition may also be incorporated into a tablet, in particular by
incorporation into a tablet matrix, which rapidly disperses the particles
after ingestion. In order to incorporate these particles into such a
tablet, a filler/binder must be added to a table that can accept the
particles, but will not allow their destruction during the tableting
process. Materials that are suitable for this purpose include, but are not
limited to, microcrystalline cellulose (AVICEL.RTM.), soy polysaccharide (EMCOSOY.RTM.),
pre-gelatinized starches (STARCH.RTM. 1500, NATIONAL.RTM. 1551), and
polyethylene glycols (CARBOWAX.RTM.). The materials should be present in
the range of 5-75% (w/w), with a preferred range of 25-50% (w/w).
In addition, disintegrants are added in order to dispense the beads once
the tablet is ingested. Suitable disintegrants include, but are not
limited to: cross-linked sodium carboxymethyl cellulose (AC-DI-SOL.RTM.),
sodium starch glycolate (EXPLOTAB.RTM., PRIMOJEL.RTM.), and cross-linked
polyvinylpolypyrrolidone (Plasone-XL). These materials should be present
in the rate of 3-15% (w/w), with a preferred range of 5-10% (w/w).
Lubricants are also added to assure proper tableting, and these can
include, but are not limited to: magnesium stearate, calcium stearate,
stearic acid, polyethylene glycol, leucine, glyceryl behanate, and
hydrogenated vegetable oil. These lubricants should be present in amounts
from 0.1-10% (w/w), with a preferred range of 0.3-3.0% (w/w).
Tablets are formed, for example, as follows. The particles are introduced
into a blender along with AVICEL.RTM., disintegrants and lubricant, mixed
for a set number of minutes to provide a homogeneous blend which is then
put in the hopper of a tablet press with which tablets are compressed. The
compression force used is adequate to form a tablet; however, not
sufficient to fracture the beads or coatings.
It will be appreciated that the multiple dosage form of the present
invention can deliver rapid and complete dosages of pharmaceutically
active amphetamine salts to achieve the desired levels of the drug in a
recipient over the course of about 8 hours with a single oral
administration.
In so doing, the levels of drug in blood plasma of the pharmaceutically
active amphetamine salts will reach a peak fairly rapidly after about 2
hours, and after about 4 hours a second pulse dose is released, wherein a
second fairly rapid additive increase of plasma drug levels occurs which
slowly decreases over the course of the next 12 hours.
Claim 1 of 20 Claims
1. A pharmaceutical formulation for
delivery of a mixture of amphetamine base salts effective to treat ADHD in
a human patient comprising: an immediate release dosage form that provides
immediate release upon oral administration to said patient; a delayed
enteric release dosage form that provides delayed release upon oral
administration to said patient; and a pharmaceutically acceptable carrier;
wherein said amphetamine base salts comprise dextroamphetamine sulfate,
dextroamphetamine saccharate, amphetamine aspartate monohydrate and
amphetamine sulfate; wherein said pharmaceutical formulation is sufficient
to maintain an effective level of amphetamine base salts in the patient
over the course of at least 8 hours without further administration of
amphetamine base salt, and the peak plasma concentration of amphetamine
base salts reached after release of said delayed enteric release dosage
form exceeds the peak plasma concentration previously reached after
release of said immediate release dosage form; and wherein said
pharmaceutical formulation, when containing about a total dose of 20 mg,
will produce in a human individual a plasma concentration versus time
curve (ng/ml versus hours) having an area under the curve (AUC) of about
467 to about 714 ng hr/ml. ____________________________________________
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