Abstract

Comprehensive comparisons of similar lipid based drug delivery systems produced by different technologies are scarce. Spray drying and fluid bed layering technologies were compared with respect to the process and product characteristics of otherwise similar simvastatin loaded dry emulsion systems. Fluid bed layering provided higher process yield (83.3% vs 71.5%), encapsulation efficiency (80.0% vs 68.4%), relative one month product stability (93.8% vs 85.5%), larger and more circular particles (336 µm vs 56 µm) and lower median oil droplet size after product reconstitution in water (2.85 µm vs 4.27 µm), compared to spray drying. However, spray dried products exhibited higher drug content (22.2 mg/g vs 9.34 mg/g). An in-vivo pharmacokinetic study in rats was performed and a pharmacokinetic model was developed in order to compare the optimised simvastatin loaded dry emulsion systems, a simvastatin glyceride mimetic loaded in the dry emulsion and a simvastatin loaded SMEDDS with a reference physical mixture. Of the formulation tested, fluid bed layered pellets excelled and provided a 115% relative increase in bioavailability. Among the two technologies, fluid bed layering provided dry emulsion products with higher relative bioavailability and better product characteristics for further processing into final dosage forms.

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