Abstract
In this work the preparation of drug loaded polymeric nanoparticles using electrospraying method and their subsequent characterization is presented. Our purpose was to incorporate the drug with extremely low solubility and low oxidative stability into polyvinylpyrolidone nanoparticles in order to improve its solubility and preserve its chemical stability and hence evaluate the ability of the technology to stabilize such systems in nanoparticulate form. Through the initial screening and optimization of process parameters and polymer solution properties, we detected different morphologies of electrosprayed product particles, where the use of lower molecular weight polymer resulted in a higher process instability as well as in a broader particle size distribution. On the other hand, the solution containing polyvinylpyrolidone with higher molecular weight showed sensitivity to different flow rates and electric field changes, which again resulted in differing the particle size and morphology. The electrosprayed products, prepared by sufficient process stability and having adequately narrow size distribution span, showed lower initial simvastatin contents than theoretically expected, which indicated an oxidative drug degradation already during the electrospraying process. The addition of antioxidants improved simvastatin chemical stability in the particles, during the process itself as well as after accelerated stability study. With an addition of butylated hydroxyanisole antioxidant mixture into initial polymer solution more than 95% of the drug content was preserved after one month at accelerated conditions, whereas in formulations without antioxidants simvastatin content was less than 6%. Antioxidants addition however did not influence only simvastatin stability but also simvastatin solubility. Surprisingly, antioxidants addition did decrease drug solubility in buffers (pH=4 and pH=6.8) for more than a half without any solid state changes of simvastatin. Potential hydrophobic interaction between simvastatin and antioxidants are hindering the drug solubility in the respective buffer, despite drug being in amorphous state.
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