Pharmacy Technician*s Course. LaGuardia Community College
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Transcript Pharmacy Technician*s Course. LaGuardia Community College
Introduction to Compounding
Compounding in Pharmacy refers to the special preparation of
drug products that are uniquely tailored to a patient’s needs
medically and otherwise.
Extemporaneous is often an adjective that describes this unique
characteristic of compounding.
What is compounding?, what is Manufacturing?
According to the FDA, compounding is
Made to dispense a product on the basis of a Rx for a specific
patient’s needs
Pharmacist can not compound a copy of a commercial available
product
Pharmacist can not sell his/her product without an Rx
Can’t advertise the product (i.e. they can advertise their
compounding service but not the product itself)
Extemperaneous Compounding
Pharmacy makes a unique product dose form for a
specific patient, i.e acetaminophen 2% cream
USP 795 says that expiration dating for these products
should not exceed 25% of the time remaining among
the manufacturer drug product or six months into the
future which ever is earliest
Any product where water is add to a solid dosage form
is given 14 days under refrigeration unless published
data state otherwise
Compounded items can be: creams, ointment, solutions,
suspensions, intravenous solutions, capsules, suppository, etc.
Solutions are homogenized mixtures of drug in aqueous medium.
Suspensions are heterogeneous mixtures of a drug in aqueous
medium. These mixtures often require the shaking of the drug
before the suspension can be given.
Intravenous solutions are aqueous drug mediums that are free of
particles; they are sterile and pyrogen free
Capsules are oral dosage forms that are enclosed in a gelatin casing
that dissolves in the stomach and small intestine
Gelatin capsules come in sizes from 000 to 13.
00o is the largest size
13 is the smallest size
Suppositories are dosage forms that are applied rectally. They are
usually made of material like glycerin which melts at slightly below
body temperature. Used for patients that can’t swallow due to
neurological disorders (dysphagia)
Special Compounded Dosage
Forms
Emulsions are mixture of two non mixable liquids in a
stabilized medium. Normally, oil in water do not mix;
however, a compound can be made (an emulsion)
where the two liquids can be “mixed” with each other.
Examples in pharmacy are creams and lotions.
Examples in food are mayonnaise and milk (fat mixed
in water)
Two types of emulsion are oil in water (o/w) or (w/o)
References for Compounding
Remington’s Pharmaceutical Sciences
Trissel’s Stability of Compounded Formulations
Drug Facts and Comparisons
United States Pharmacopeia
The International Journal of Compounding
Pharmacists
Mortar and Pestle
Very important in compounding
represents a symbol of the pharmacy profession. Shown as
Used to comminutate or triturate a substance to smaller
particle sizes (see last slide). Smaller particle sizes are a key
to make certain compounds more appealing to the touch
and taste.
Glass mortar is used to mix liquids with powder and
porcelain (Wedgewood) is used for granular powders
Solutions
Aqueous or Hydroalcoholic mixtures that are solvents
for homogenized solute/solvent system
Solute : drug that is mixed into the system
Solvent: the vehicle or medium used to carry the solute
Solvents include:
Purified water USP: contains no more than 10 ppm solids
Sterile water for injection USP: same as purified water except
for sterility and pyrogen free state: used to mix IV drugs
Sterile water for Irrigation USP: used to make oral solutions
Types of solutions
Simple Syrup USP: 85% w/v sucrose in water.
Excellent vehicle for a sweeten drug dosage form for children
Self Preserving: no antibacterials
Elixirs
Water and alcohol cosolvent systems
Typically as some sugar also
Usually about 10%w/v to 40% w/v alcohol
Aromatic Waters
Mixture of water, alcohol, and a volatile oil
Jasmine water is water, alcohol and jasmine oil
Spirits or Essence
Mixture of water, alcohol and volatile oil where alcohol content is 50% to 90%
Tinctures
Hydroalcoholic mixtures where concentration of drug is 10%
10% is the concentration of the whole plant source; 1% is the active drug
Ie. Opium Tincture is 10% in opium and 1% or morphine
Characteristics of Solutions
Benefits
Provides an easy way to measure doses for small patients
and babies
Provides a way to increase bioavailability of the drug
Drugs can be sweeten and flavored to mask bad taste
Disadvantages
Bulky dosage form
Susceptible to hydrolysis with water
Suspensions
Heterogeneous mixture of drug into a medium that
normally it does not dissolve in.
System consists of water, drug powder, sweetener,
flavorants, colorants and an agent called an surfactant
which “thickens” the medium to allow particles of drug
to remain “suspended”
In systems with no surfactant the drug particles quickly
settle to the bottom and aggregate.
Surfactants allow the system to be uniform long enough
to measure a dose
“Shake before using” is normally require as an auxiliary
label
Surfactants
Acacia
Methylcellulose
Carboxymethylcellulose
Xanthan gum
Carrageenan
Amylopectin
Bentonite magma 5% (exhibit thixotropy: gels on standing
and liquefies on shaking)
Other name for surfactants are Suspending agents
A Common commercially available suspending agent is
OraPlus ®
Emulsion
A pharmaceutical system where two immiscible liquids are mixed
together to form a stable system
Normally two immiscible liquids like water and canola oil don’t mix
and the less dense oil beads to the top
Purpose of Emulsion
Increased drug stability (drug that under hydrolysis in water may be
more stable in emulsion)
Better applicability in topical administration
Two phase of the emulsion
Internal phase- the dispersed liquid
External phase-the dispersion medium liquid
If water is the dispersed liquid you have a w/o emulsion
If oil is the dispersed liquid you have a 0/w emulsion
The type of emulsion formed depends on the phase volumes and the
type of surfactant or emulsifier used to stabilize this system
Emulsifying Agents
Emulsifier or surfactants are agents that stabilize an
emulsion.
Emulsifiers can be natural or synthetic
As emulsions age, they destabilize and separate in two
phase (i.e. milk that is old separates). This is called
cracking and means the emulsion is destabilized
Emulsifier
Natural
Acacia
Tragacanth
Agar
Methylcellulose
Carboxylmethylcellulose
Synthethic
Sodium Lauryl Sulfate
Sorbitan esters (Spans)
Polysorbates (Tweens)
Popular non medicated Emulsion
bases
Alamay Base
0/w
Vanishing cream (moisturizer)
Cetaphil
0/w
Non soap cleaner
Eucerin
w/0
Moisturizing cream
Keri Lotion
0/w
Moisturizing cream
Ointment Bases
Ointment are semisolid mixture of a drug (in liquid)
incorporated into a oily stiffen base.
Oleaginous base
Petrolatum is a high hydrocarbon mixture base used to carry water
insoluble drug into the skin
Petrolatum is not washable and can’t absorb any water
Forms occlusive layer and used as an emollient
For example : Vaselin ®
Absorption base
Can absorb water
Hydrophilic Petrolatum (Aquaphor ®)
Water soluble base
Can absorb water
Can wash easily with soap and water
Consists of PEG 3350 and PEG 400, which are water soluble bases
Propylene glycol-ethanol systems when mixed with 2%
hydroxypropyl cellulose forms a clear gel
A gel is emulsion system where a solid is the dispersed
phase and water is dispersion medium
Exhibit thixotrophy: shaking and agitation causes the
honey like substance to flow more easily (like water)
Absorbs considerable water into the gel “sponge effect”
Used in wound care to sieve pus
Incorporation of drug into ointments or emulsions involves the
following:
Comminution
Break down and crushing solid particles into smaller particle sizes to
increase its surface area
Trituration is comminution by frictional shear force (rubbing)
In practice comminution is done in a porcelain wedgewood mortar and
pestle
Levigation is the process of increasing particle size by an a small
amount of mineral oil to the reduced drug powder. This act “wets”
the powder
The drug/levigating oil mix is then incorporated into the base when
heated to near molten state (Fusion method)
Alternatively the drug/oil mix is incorporated little by little into the
base via geometric dilution on an ointment slab
Geometric dilution
Geometric Dilution
Technique used in the mixing of two unequally sized
ingredients
Typically involves ointment or creams on an ointment
slab
Small quantity is measure against an equally sized
quantity from the larger ingredient and mixed
The mixture is now measured against an equally sized
portion from the larger ingredient and mixed
This process continues until both ingredients are
incorporated into a single product
Prepacking and Unit dose systems
Helps in inventory management in hospitals
Prepacked and unit dose blister cards by law are permitted to be return to inventory upon
return
Beyond use dating BUD are one of two systems
50% of the expiration date on the manufacturer drug or 1 year whichever is sooner (my
hospital uses this)
25% or six months whichever is sooner
State and Federal regulations requires that the following is present on the prepackage
label (at a minimum):
Name, dose, and dosage form of drug
Internal lot number of drug AND manufacturer’s name and lot
BUD (not manufacturer’s exp date)
The master record file must contain:
Drug, dose, dose form
Manufacturer’s name, lot number, expiration date
Internally assigned lot number
BUD
Date prepacked
Quantity prepacked in this batch
Technician initials
Pharmacist’s SIGNATURE
Medications that should not be
prepacked (unit dose)
The standard unit dose prepackage machine as a mechanical dial that rotates
between metal plates that are heated to high temperatures. Oral dose forms
are placed on the dial and the metal plates seal the blister pack material around
the medication with heat
Some medications should not be prepacked with a standard machine because
the machine will become contaminated with dust particles from these drugs
At times a dedicated machine can be used for some of these drugs
Common highly allergic potential drugs include:
Penicillins, Cephalosporins, sulfa drugs
Moisture Sensitive medications
HIV medications
Praxada ®
Pyridostigmine (Mestinon)
Prasugrel (Effluent)
Emtriva
Most orally melting tablets : Risperdal M
Capsules
Most gelatin capsules will melt when exposed to heat
Ritonovir
Omega 3 Fatty Acids capsules
Chemotherapy drugs and Teratogenic drugs
Chlorambucil (Leukeran)
Cyclophosphamide (Cytotaxan)
Cyclosporin (Gengraf)
Bosentan (Tracleer): Pregnancy category X
In general, always inquire about the pregnancy rating and the cytotoxic
potential of drugs before you are asked to prepack anything. (especially
if you are a woman of childbearing potential)
For a more complete listing visit:
http://www.ashp.org/s_ashp/docs/files/MedNO_unit-
dosedpackage.pdf
Introduction to Sterile Products
A sterile product is a product that is free of
contamination, microorganism free, and pyrogen free
Examples of sterile products are intravenous products
(IV), ophthalmic products (for the eye), and nasal
products (for the nose), Intramuscular (into the
muscle) and subcutaneous (under the skin)
Aseptic technique refers to the procedure of properly
performing the preparation of sterile products.
Includes the environment, equipment, and personnel
garb
Provides guidelines for the procedure
Normally any agent that bypasses the skin or the
gastrointestinal tract must be both sterile and pyrogen free.
This is because the skin and the GI tract have a protective
role in filtering out damaging foreign substances or
microorganisms.
The blood is a sterile body fluid that requires sterile drug
products. Blood is filtered by the spleen and then by the
lymph nodes as its becomes lymph; however, when a drug
is introduced directly into the blood it must be sterile.
Consequences of contaminated IV products can be serious
Most IV drug products are contaminated by touch
contamination.
Bacteria, fungus, and other microorganism colonize the
skin
Common skin microorganisms are: Candida,
Dermatophytes, and Staphylococcus bacteria. Others
are common as well.
Contaminated products can “colonize” the blood and
produce bacteremia and fungemia. Infections can
evolve into septic shock and death.
Watch :
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KC8qgxNB2FA
USP 797
Introduced in 2004 by the US Pharmacopeia.
Consists of standards for the environment to be
considered in the preparation of sterile products
Endorsed by JCAHO and other regulatory agencies
Followed in most hospitals with others moving towards
compliance.
Standards include wall/ceiling, wall/wall and wall/floor
junction specifications, etc
In general, sterile products are prepared in laminar
flow hoods in similarly compliance air quality rooms
Such rooms are called “clean rooms”
Usually have partitions that separate areas of the room
for storage of IV products, gloves, and needle and
syringes
Rooms are usually positively pressurized to “push”
contaminates out and to keep other particles from
being pulled in.
Other Sterile Product Equipment
Needle are sterile puncturing devices meant to access drug
solutions in vials and to administer drugs to patients.
Normally are 3/8 of an inches to 3.5 inches in length
The diameter, or bore, of the needle is determined by its
gauge.
The larger the gauge the smaller the bore of the needle
In general, 25 or 27 gauge needles are under for
subcutaneous injections, 22 gauge for IM injections with 18
gauge and 16 gauge meant for pharmacy compounding of
IV products. 13 gauge is typically the larger bore needle you
will find.
Syringes are the containers that hold the drug solution
after its been drawn from a vial.
Consists of a tube with graduations marks, a piston, a
plunger with grip collar and at the other end a luer lok
tip (most syringes).
This luer lok tip is designed to be a twist on to
attached to a needle or to a injection port on a catheter
to administer an injection
Author: William Rafti of the William Rafti
Institute from Wikipedia
A word about filters
At times a filter is needed to filter IV solutions
i.e. when breaking an ampule you need to use a filter
needle to draw the solution to prevent glass particles
from entering the IV.
A 0.22 micron filter is a special filter that is called a
“sterilizing” filter that can sterilize a fluid as it is
passed through the filter.
Compounding Vocabulary
Terminology for compounding and dosage forms that may be on the
exam
Mucilages are mediums that are similar to suspensions in that the drug
is suspended into the medium. (Metamucil®). Magmas and milks are
in this category
Suspensions of high viscosity
Extractives
Tincture is a hydroalcoholic extractive of a drug where the potency of drug is
equal to 100 mg of the crude ingredient per ml. i.e. Tincture of Opium 1 ml
contains the equivalent of 10 mg morphine (this is how much morphine is in 100
mg of crude opium poppy)
Fluidextracts are 10x the potency of tinctures
Troche
A lozenge or dosage form meant to dissolve in the mouth
Pellet
A solid cyclindrical dose form that is planted subcutaneously for slow absorption
Powders
Finely divided powders that are given internally
(swallowed) or topically. Usually dispensed in pouches
called “powder paper”
Suppositories
Dosage form given into the rectum, vagina, or urethra for local
or systemic drug effects
Common excipients are glycerin or cocoa butter
Enema
Dosage form that can be rectally for local effect
Collodion
Mixture of alcohol and water with pyroxylin
Applied topically (poison if swallowed)
Liquid Bandages
Comminution
Reduction of gross particles to granular powder (crushing)
Trituration
reduction of particles sizes by rubbing and friction heating
Both comminution and trituration occur in a wedgewood mortar
Levigation
Add a small amount of solvent to a powder to increase the surface
area for mixing
Pulverization by Intervention
Adding a small amount of volatile solvent to a granular powder to
aid in trituration. As trituration proceeds the heat of friction causes
the finely divided powder to be left behind as the solvent
evaporates.
camphor crystals mixed with alcohol