Abstract
Compressed tablets of ticlopidine hydrochloride were coated with three aqueous film coating formulations and aged under 95% relative humidity at 23° and 37°. The in vitro dissolution of the drug from tablets coated with the formulation containing polymethacrylic acid esters before aging was slower than the tablets coated with the formulations containing hydroxypropyl methylcellulose or ethylcellulose dispersion. On aging, the in vitro drug dissolution of the coated and uncoated tablets decreased and the decrease depended on the film forming excipient in the coating formulation and the temperature of aging. The tablets coated with the formulation containing polymethacrylic acid esters dissolved very slowly after aging. Higher moisture contents of the tablets after aging under 95% relative humidity at 23° compared to 37° resulted in a consistently lower tablet crushing strength. The tablets coated with the formulation containing 10% hydroxypropy1 methylcellulose showed a smaller decrease in the tablet crushing strength on aging compared to the other two formulations.