Abstract

Biorelevant media are increasingly being employed as dissolution media in drug development, including in smaller volumes than 900ml and under non-sink conditions. The objectives were to assess interday repeatability, interanalyst repeatability, and interlaboratory reproducibility of dissolution profiles from biorelevant media, as well as to assess the impacts of biorelevant media production method and biorelevant medium volume on dissolution profiles. Ibuprofen and ketoconazole tablets were subjected to dissolution testing in 500ml, 300ml, and 40ml of fasted state simulated gastric fluid (FaSSGF), fed state simulated gastric fluid (FeSSGF), fasted state simulated intestinal fluid version 2 (FaSSIF-V2), and fed state simulated intestinal fluid version 2 (FeSSIF-V2). f2 was used to assess repeatability and reproducibility of dissolution profiles. Results indicate favorable interday repeatability (83 of 88 comparisons were similar), favorable interanalyst repeatability (19 of 21 comparisons were similar), and favorable interlaboratory reproducibility (10 of 14 comparisons were similar) of dissolution profiles from biorelevant media, with commercial media showing greater interlaboratory reproducibility than ‘from scratch’ media. However, biorelevant medium production had low impact on profiles when one analyst conducted all medium preparations and study procedures at one location. Additionally, biorelevant media detected differences when products were not similar. Overall, biorelevant media showed favorable repeatability and reproducibility performance.

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