Improving powder flow properties of a direct compression formulation using a two-step glidant mixing process

18Citations
Citations of this article
75Readers
Mendeley users who have this article in their library.

Abstract

To improve powder flow of a high-dose direct compression formulation (drug content 30%), we compared a two-step operation for mixing glidants with a conventional one-step glidant mixing process. This two-step mixing operation was studied with two kinds of mixtures; an active pharmaceutical ingredient (API)-glidant combination and a direct compression excipient-glidant combination. The two-step operation permitted the selection of the optimum glidant type and concentration in each glidant-mixing procedure even though the formulation had different powder properties such as micronized API and enlarged direct compression vehicles, whereas the conventional approaches forced the selection of a certain glidant type and concentration at one-step mixing. The addition of 0.5% nonporous silica markedly improved API flow. In contrast, 1.0% porous silica was the appropriate glidant to enhance excipient flow at direct compression excipient-glidant mixing. The two-step operation dominantly enhanced powder flow when the appropriate API-glidant mixture and the suitable direct compression excipients-glidant mixture were blended compared to the one-step operation with its optimum glidant concentration. The results showed that the angle of repose was 43° and the critical orifice diameter was 10 mm in the twostep operation, whereas it was 47° and 16 mm in the one-step operation. The two-step operation of glidant mixing enhanced powder flow of the high-dose direct compression formulation compared with the one-step operation. The two-step operation eliminates the bottleneck of powder flow and allows direct compression to be more worth applying for formulation and process development trials. © 2009 Pharmaceutical Society of Japan.

Cite

CITATION STYLE

APA

Abe, H., Yasui, S., Kuwata, A., & Takeuchi, H. (2009). Improving powder flow properties of a direct compression formulation using a two-step glidant mixing process. Chemical and Pharmaceutical Bulletin, 57(7), 647–652. https://doi.org/10.1248/cpb.57.647

Register to see more suggestions

Mendeley helps you to discover research relevant for your work.

Already have an account?

Save time finding and organizing research with Mendeley

Sign up for free