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Research Article

A quality-by-design study to develop Nifedipine nanosuspension: examining the relative impact of formulation variables, wet media milling process parameters and excipient variability on drug product quality attributes

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Pages 1942-1952 | Received 15 May 2018, Accepted 04 Jul 2018, Published online: 12 Oct 2018
 

Abstract

Wet milling is a multifunctional and the most common method to prepare a drug nanosuspension for improving the bioavailability of poorly water soluble drugs. A suitable way of preparing a high drug-loaded nifedipine nanosuspension using wet stirred media milling was investigated in the present study. Nifedipine, a poorly water soluble drug, was selected as a model drug to enhance its dissolution rate and oral bioavailability by preparing an appropriate crystalline nanosuspension. Process parameters, such as milling media volume, milling speed and milling time, were optimized using the one variable at a time (OVAT) approach. A similar method was used to select an appropriate polymeric stabilizer and a surfactant from different categories of polymeric stabilizers (HPC SL, HPC SSL Soluplus®, Kollidon® VA 64 and HPMC E 15) and surfactants (Poloxamer 407, Kolliphor TPGS and Docusate sodium). A systematic optimization of critical formulation parameters (such as drug concentration, polymer concentration and surfactant concentration) was performed with the aid of the Box-Behnken design. Mean particle size, polydispersity index and zeta potential as critical quality attributes (CQAs) were selected in the design for the evaluation and optimization of the formulation and validation of the improved product. The nifedipine nanosuspension that was prepared using HPC and poloxamer 407 was found to be most stable with the lowest mean particle size as compared with the formulations prepared using other polymeric stabilizers and surfactants. The optimized formulation was further spray-dried and characterized using the Fourier Transform Infrared spectroscopy (FTIR), differential scanning calorimetry (DSC), powder X-ray diffraction (PXRD), polarized light microscopy (PLM) and in-vitro dissolution study. Results have shown no interaction between the drug particles and stabilizers, nor a reduction in the crystallinity of drug, nor an increase in the saturation solubility and rapid in vitro dissolution as compared with pure nifedipine crystals. Thus, the current study supports the suitability of the wet stirred media milling method and a combination of HPC SSL and poloxamer 407 as stabilizers for the preparation of nifedipine nanosuspension.

Disclosure statement

No potential conflict of interest was reported by the authors.

Additional information

Funding

The authors are thankful to Nisso America on behalf of Natoli institute for Industrial Pharmacy Research & Development at Long Island University for providing grant for this investigation.

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