Abstract

The present study documents the drug-excipient incompatibility in the physical mixtures and its influence on bulk homogeneity and flowability for dry powder inhalers (DPI) applications. Binary mixtures with the model drugs (aceclofenac; salbutamol sulphate) and lactose monohydrate were prepared separately at varied drug loading (1–33 wt.%), and their physicochemical properties were assessed using various characterization techniques. The DSC, P-XRD and FT-IR studies show a significant shift in the signature peak of drug and excipient while ss-NMR, LC-MS show the absence of peaks. In contrast, new peaks are observed in LC-MS and GC studies. The insights are comprehended through a series of XPS studies. The findings indicated the formation of condensed or addition compound. This is attributed to an interaction between polar protic groups (-NH-, -COOH, -OH) and hemiacetal carbon (HO-C-OR) of drug and excipient in the solid-state. It induces crystal strain and alters bulk properties related to mixing (relative standard deviation, %RSD), cohesion and flow function coefficient (FFC). However, surface modification of excipient using MgSt and aerosil R972 (model nano-particle) eliminates such inter-particle interactions, crystal level changes. It improves the bulk properties of binary mixtures pivotal for DPI performance.

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