Abstract
Amending the neglect of finite dissolution in traditional release models, this study proposed a more generalized drug release model considering the simultaneous dissolution and diffusion procedure from a drug-loaded spherical matrix. How the shape factor (n = 0, 1/2, and 2/3 for the planar, cylindrical, and spherical geometry, respectively) of dispersed drug particles affected the release from the matrix was examined for the first time. Numerical solutions of this generalized model were validated by consensus with a short-time analytical solution for planar drugs and by the approach of the diffusion-controlled limits with Higuchi’s model. The drug release rate increases with the ratio of dissolution/diffusion rate (G) and the ratio of solubility/drug loading (K) but decreases with the shape factor of drug particles. A zero-order release profile is identified for planar drugs before starting the surface depletion layer, and also found for cylindrical and spherical dispersed drugs when K and G are small, i.e. the loaded drug is mainly un-dissolved and the drug release rate is dissolution-controlled. It is also shown that for the case of a small G value, the variation of drug release profile, due to the drug particle geometry, becomes prominent. Detailed comparison with the results of the traditional Higuchi’s model indicates that Higuchi’s model can be applied only when G is large because of the assumption of an instantaneous dissolution. For K = 1/101–1/2, the present analysis suggests an error of 33–85% for drug release predicted by Higuchi’s model for G = 100, 14–44% error for G = 101, while a less than 5% error for G ≧ 103.
Highlights
A reservoir-type drug carrier with un-dissolved drug particles loaded uniformly in a matrix is one of the most common formulations for a controlled release system
The effects of the dispersed drug shape on release profiles were investigated for the first time
Numerical solutions of planar drugs were compared with a short-time analytical solution and with the corresponding diffusion-controlled limits in Higuchi’s model to validate this release model developed
Summary
A reservoir-type drug carrier with un-dissolved drug particles loaded uniformly in a matrix is one of the most common formulations for a controlled release system. Higuchi’s model proposed in the early 1960s remain the best known and most popular one [1,2,3]. After Higuchi’s model, many works directed towards various improvements to extend its applications [6,7,8] In spite of these further refinements, the effect of a finite dissolution rate is still ignored in general. The effects of a finite dissolution rate have been observed for rather insoluble substances [11,12]. It is, necessary to develop a more general dissolution-diffusion model to describe release behavior
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