week10.1.stability 2004 - John Stephenson
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Transcript week10.1.stability 2004 - John Stephenson
Stability
the extent to which a product retains,
within specified limits, and throughout
its period of storage and use, the same
properties and characteristics it
possessed when manufactured
types
CHEE 440
chemical
physical
microbiologic
therapeutic
toxicologic
1
Degradation Mechanisms
Hydrolysis
CHEE 440
cleavage of bonds by action of water
esters
» procaine, atropine, aspirin
amides
» chloramphenicol, penicillin,
cephalosporins
2
Degradation Mechanisms
Oxidation
CHEE 440
molecule gains O or loses H
susceptible compounds
» phenols, aromatic amines,
aldehydes, ethers, unsaturated
aliphatic compounds
examples
» epinephrine, vitamin A, ascorbic
acid
3
Degradation Mechanisms
photodegradation
CHEE 440
light energy provides energy of
activation
reaction rate is independent of T
photo-oxidation
» catalyzed by light
» nifedipine, colchicine,
chlorpromazine, riboflavin
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Degradation Mechanisms
isomerisation
CHEE 440
conversion of a drug into its optical
isomer
enantiomers often have significantly
different ADME and pharmacological
action
often catalyzed by acid or a base
ex. tetracycline, pilocarpine,
cephalosporin esters
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Degradation Mechanisms
Interactions
between formulation
compounds
buffers
» general acid-base catalysts
» formation of amides
CHEE 440
benzocaine and citric acid
accelerated photodecomposition
» riboflavin in presence of nonionic or
anionic surfactant
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KINETICS
rates
and orders of reactions
use
more stable dosage forms
» storage conditions
prediction of shelf life
factors
concentration
temperature
light
catalysts
CHEE 440
7
Factors governing
stability
Liquids
pH
temperature
ionic strength
solvent
oxygen
Solids
CHEE 440
excipients
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EFFECT OF PH
Catalyst
CHEE 440
substance that influences rate of
reaction but is not changed chemically
either accelerates or inhibits
does not change position of equilibrium
no change in DGo
form a complex with reactant
decomposes to form product + catalyst
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Acid-Base Catalysis
accelerated
decomposition in
presence of acid or base
often buffered therefore catalyzed
specific
CHEE 440
acid-base catalysis
rate law contains [H3O+] or [OH-]
10
Hydrolysis of Ester
in
acidic solution
ester = S
water = W
product = P
S H SH
k
SH W P
dP
k o bsS
dt
kobs k 1 H
CHEE 440
11
Hydrolysis of Ester
base-catalyzed
degradation
k2
S OH P
dP
k o bsS
dt
kobs k 2 OH
CHEE 440
12
Example
CHEE 440
Drug X degrades by a base-catalyzed
process in a buffer of pH 9 at room T. If
the initial concentration of X was 0.1 M
and after 4 days there was 0.099 M of X
present, determine k2 for this reaction.
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Solvent catalysis
indicated
by minimum region of k
versus pH plot
can occur along with both acid and
base catalyzed degradation
log kobs
dP
k o k1 H k 2 OH S
dt
pH
CHEE 440
14
General Acid-Base
Catalysis
catalysis
in buffered solution by
other than H+ or OH kobs vs pH diagram deviates from
expected behavior
CHEE 440
streptozotocin in phosphate buffer
15
Effect of T
any
change in conditions produces
different k
Arrhenius
Ea
k A exp
RT
CHEE 440
A = Arrhenius factor
» frequency of collisions
Ea = activation energy
» minimum energy required per
collision
used in accelerated stability testing
16
Example
The
rate constant for the
decomposition of expensinin at 120
°C is 1.173 hr-1 and at 140 °C is 4.86
hr-1. Calculate the activation energy
and the Arrhenius factor for this
reaction.
CHEE 440
17
Effect of Solvent
affects
rate constant
polar solvents increase the rate of
reaction where the products are
more polar than the reactants
nonpolar solvents increase the
rate of reaction where the
products are more nonpolar than
the reactants
CHEE 440
18
Effect of Ionic Strength
ionic
strength, m
1
2
m miz i
2
influences
rate constant
logk logk o 2AzA zB m
CHEE 440
19
Solid Dosage Forms
Stability
concerns
moisture
hygroscopic excipients
excipient catalyzed reactions
» ex. Mg stearate lubricant
CHEE 440
20
Drug Stabilization
primarily hydrolysis
strategies
» optimum pH, buffer, solvent
» refrigeration
» complexation agent
» dosage form
oxidation
antioxidants
» undergo oxidation faster
CHEE 440
micelles, suspensions
sodium bisulfite, ascorbic acid
ascorbyl palmitate, butylated
hydroxytoluene (BHT), vitamin E
21
Shelf-Life
effective
period of storage and
use
t90
time required to degrade 10% of
the drug
90% drug still active
determined by reaction kinetics
CHEE 440
22
t90
zero-order
t 90
first
A0
10k 0
order
l n 0.9
t 90
k1
second
order
1
t 90
9A 0 k2
CHEE 440
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Example
An
ophthalmic solution has a
mydriatic drug present at a 5 mg/ml
concentration. The drug degrades by
first order kinetics (k1 = 0.0005/day).
how long will it take for the drug to
degrade to 90% of its original
concentration?
CHEE 440
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