Abstract

The oral route is the preferred option for drug administration but contains the inherent issue of drug absorption from the gastro-intestinal tract (GIT) in order to elicit systemic activity. A prerequisite for absorption is drug dissolution, which is dependent upon drug solubility in the variable milieu of GIT fluid, with poorly soluble drugs presenting a formulation and biopharmaceutical challenge. Multiple factors within GIT fluid influence solubility ranging from pH to the concentration and ratio of amphiphilic substances, such as phospholipid, bile salt, monoglyceride, and cholesterol. To aid in vitro investigation simulated intestinal fluids (SIF) covering the fasted and fed state have been developed. SIF media is complex and statistical design of experiment (DoE) investigations have revealed the range of solubility values possible within each state due to physiological variability along with the media factors and factor interactions which influence solubility. However, these studies require large numbers of experiments (>60) and are not feasible or sensible within a drug development setting. In the current study a smaller dual level, reduced experimental number (20) DoE providing three arms covering the fasted and fed states along with a combined analysis has been investigated. The results indicate that this small scale investigation is feasible and provides solubility ranges that encompass published data in human and simulated fasted and fed fluids. The measured fasted and fed solubility ranges are in agreement with published large scale DoE results in around half of the cases, with the differences due to changes in media composition between studies. Indicating that drug specific behaviors are being determined and that careful media factor and concentration level selection is required in order to determine a physiologically relevant solubility range. The study also correctly identifies the major single factor or factors which influence solubility but it is evident that lower significance factors (for example bile salt) are not picked up due to the lower sample number employed. A similar issue is present with factor interactions with only a limited number available for study and generally not determined to have a significant solubility impact due to the lower statistical power of the study. The study indicates that a reduced experimental number DoE is feasible, will provide solubility range results with identification of major solubility factors however statistical limitations restrict the analysis. The approach therefore represents a useful initial screening tool that can guide further in depth analysis of a drug’s behavior in gastrointestinal fluids.

Highlights

  • The worldwide demand for new drug therapies is growing, rapidly driven by aging of populations increasing stratification of diseases,[1] leading to the growth of drug discovery research

  • The results indicated that an individual drugs solubility could vary over 3 orders of magnitude in either the fasted or fed state, solubility in fasted media was lower than fed and published literature solubility values in either human intestinal fluid (HIF) or simulated media were in agreement.[8]

  • The equilibrium solubility results in either arm of this study are presented in Figures 1 and 2 indicate that the measurements are in broad agreement with available published equilibrium solubility data in fasted and fed HIF, simulated intestinal fluids,[8,20] and published design of experiment (DoE) studies in fasted[13] and fed[14] simulated intestinal media systems

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Summary

Introduction

The worldwide demand for new drug therapies is growing, rapidly driven by aging of populations increasing stratification of diseases,[1] leading to the growth of drug discovery research. The oral dosage form is optimal[2] as it is the most convenient, costeffective route of administration with the highest patient compliance. For oral dosage forms to attain the required systemic exposure the drug needs to dissolve in the gastro-intestinal fluid, which can be influenced by its variable composition.[3] For poorly water-soluble drugs, low solubility coupled with low dissolution rate can result in limited and variable absorption. Studying drug solubility is of critical significance in order to understand the behavior of low solubility drugs in the gastrointestinal. Special Issue: Industry-Academic Collaboration in Oral Biopharmaceutics: The European IMI OrBiTo Project.

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