Application of miscibility analysis and determination of Soluplus solubility map for development of carvedilol-loaded nanofibers
Authorized Users Only
2017
Authors
Kaljević, OliveraĐuriš, Jelena

Čalija, Bojan

Lavrić, Zoran
Kristl, Julijana
Ibrić, Svetlana

Article (Published version)

Metadata
Show full item recordAbstract
Electrospinning was used to produce carvedilol-loaded Soluplus polymer nanofibers using a systematic approach. Miscibility between drug and polymer was determined through calculation of the interaction parameter, chi, and the difference between the total solubility parameters, Delta d(t). A solubility map for Soluplus was obtained by examining different solvent systems, carrying out electrospinning, and characterizing the nanofibers formed. Miscibility studies showed that carvedilol and Soluplus can form a miscible system (chi = -2.3054; Delta delta(t) lt 7.0 MPa1/2). Based on the Soluplus solubility map, acetone: chloroform (90: 10; w/w) represents a suitable solvent system for electrospinning of carvedilol-loaded Soluplus nanofibers. Scanning electron microscopy of these nanofiber samples showed smooth surface morphology. The nanofibers had a regular cylindrical morphology. Beads appeared along the nanofibers more frequently in formulations with lower percentages of carvedilol. Dif...ferential scanning calorimetry showed no melting endothermic peak for carvedilol, which suggests its complete conversion from the crystalline to the amorphous form (at polymer: carvedilol 1: 1). The infrared spectrum of the carvedilol-loaded Soluplus nanofibers showed no characteristic carvedilol peak at 3344.5 cm(-1), which suggests interactions between carvedilol and Soluplus. Dissolution studies of these nanofibers showed improved pure carvedilol dissolution properties, with >85% of the carvedilol released in the first 15 min, versus 20% for pure carvedilol. The use of miscibility analysis and polymer solubility studies demonstrate great technological potential to tackle the challenge for inadequate dissolution of poorly water-soluble drugs.
Keywords:
Poorly soluble drugs / Solvent mapping / Electrospinning / Solid dispersions / Solubility enhancement / Interaction parameterSource:
International Journal of Pharmaceutics, 2017, 533, 2, 445-454Publisher:
- Elsevier Science BV, Amsterdam
Funding / projects:
Note:
- Peer-reviewed manuscript: http://147.91.1.136/handle/123456789/3447
DOI: 10.1016/j.ijpharm.2017.05.017
ISSN: 0378-5173
PubMed: 28495583
WoS: 000414188500015
Scopus: 2-s2.0-85019246021
Collections
Institution/Community
PharmacyTY - JOUR AU - Kaljević, Olivera AU - Đuriš, Jelena AU - Čalija, Bojan AU - Lavrić, Zoran AU - Kristl, Julijana AU - Ibrić, Svetlana PY - 2017 UR - https://farfar.pharmacy.bg.ac.rs/handle/123456789/2882 AB - Electrospinning was used to produce carvedilol-loaded Soluplus polymer nanofibers using a systematic approach. Miscibility between drug and polymer was determined through calculation of the interaction parameter, chi, and the difference between the total solubility parameters, Delta d(t). A solubility map for Soluplus was obtained by examining different solvent systems, carrying out electrospinning, and characterizing the nanofibers formed. Miscibility studies showed that carvedilol and Soluplus can form a miscible system (chi = -2.3054; Delta delta(t) lt 7.0 MPa1/2). Based on the Soluplus solubility map, acetone: chloroform (90: 10; w/w) represents a suitable solvent system for electrospinning of carvedilol-loaded Soluplus nanofibers. Scanning electron microscopy of these nanofiber samples showed smooth surface morphology. The nanofibers had a regular cylindrical morphology. Beads appeared along the nanofibers more frequently in formulations with lower percentages of carvedilol. Differential scanning calorimetry showed no melting endothermic peak for carvedilol, which suggests its complete conversion from the crystalline to the amorphous form (at polymer: carvedilol 1: 1). The infrared spectrum of the carvedilol-loaded Soluplus nanofibers showed no characteristic carvedilol peak at 3344.5 cm(-1), which suggests interactions between carvedilol and Soluplus. Dissolution studies of these nanofibers showed improved pure carvedilol dissolution properties, with >85% of the carvedilol released in the first 15 min, versus 20% for pure carvedilol. The use of miscibility analysis and polymer solubility studies demonstrate great technological potential to tackle the challenge for inadequate dissolution of poorly water-soluble drugs. PB - Elsevier Science BV, Amsterdam T2 - International Journal of Pharmaceutics T1 - Application of miscibility analysis and determination of Soluplus solubility map for development of carvedilol-loaded nanofibers VL - 533 IS - 2 SP - 445 EP - 454 DO - 10.1016/j.ijpharm.2017.05.017 ER -
@article{ author = "Kaljević, Olivera and Đuriš, Jelena and Čalija, Bojan and Lavrić, Zoran and Kristl, Julijana and Ibrić, Svetlana", year = "2017", abstract = "Electrospinning was used to produce carvedilol-loaded Soluplus polymer nanofibers using a systematic approach. Miscibility between drug and polymer was determined through calculation of the interaction parameter, chi, and the difference between the total solubility parameters, Delta d(t). A solubility map for Soluplus was obtained by examining different solvent systems, carrying out electrospinning, and characterizing the nanofibers formed. Miscibility studies showed that carvedilol and Soluplus can form a miscible system (chi = -2.3054; Delta delta(t) lt 7.0 MPa1/2). Based on the Soluplus solubility map, acetone: chloroform (90: 10; w/w) represents a suitable solvent system for electrospinning of carvedilol-loaded Soluplus nanofibers. Scanning electron microscopy of these nanofiber samples showed smooth surface morphology. The nanofibers had a regular cylindrical morphology. Beads appeared along the nanofibers more frequently in formulations with lower percentages of carvedilol. Differential scanning calorimetry showed no melting endothermic peak for carvedilol, which suggests its complete conversion from the crystalline to the amorphous form (at polymer: carvedilol 1: 1). The infrared spectrum of the carvedilol-loaded Soluplus nanofibers showed no characteristic carvedilol peak at 3344.5 cm(-1), which suggests interactions between carvedilol and Soluplus. Dissolution studies of these nanofibers showed improved pure carvedilol dissolution properties, with >85% of the carvedilol released in the first 15 min, versus 20% for pure carvedilol. The use of miscibility analysis and polymer solubility studies demonstrate great technological potential to tackle the challenge for inadequate dissolution of poorly water-soluble drugs.", publisher = "Elsevier Science BV, Amsterdam", journal = "International Journal of Pharmaceutics", title = "Application of miscibility analysis and determination of Soluplus solubility map for development of carvedilol-loaded nanofibers", volume = "533", number = "2", pages = "445-454", doi = "10.1016/j.ijpharm.2017.05.017" }
Kaljević, O., Đuriš, J., Čalija, B., Lavrić, Z., Kristl, J.,& Ibrić, S.. (2017). Application of miscibility analysis and determination of Soluplus solubility map for development of carvedilol-loaded nanofibers. in International Journal of Pharmaceutics Elsevier Science BV, Amsterdam., 533(2), 445-454. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ijpharm.2017.05.017
Kaljević O, Đuriš J, Čalija B, Lavrić Z, Kristl J, Ibrić S. Application of miscibility analysis and determination of Soluplus solubility map for development of carvedilol-loaded nanofibers. in International Journal of Pharmaceutics. 2017;533(2):445-454. doi:10.1016/j.ijpharm.2017.05.017 .
Kaljević, Olivera, Đuriš, Jelena, Čalija, Bojan, Lavrić, Zoran, Kristl, Julijana, Ibrić, Svetlana, "Application of miscibility analysis and determination of Soluplus solubility map for development of carvedilol-loaded nanofibers" in International Journal of Pharmaceutics, 533, no. 2 (2017):445-454, https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ijpharm.2017.05.017 . .