Soad Ali Yehia
1, Mohamed Shafik El-Ridi
2, Mina Ibrahim Tadros
1*, Nolwa Gamal El-Sherif
31 Department of Pharmaceutics and Industrial Pharmacy, Faculty of Pharmacy, Cairo University, Cairo, Egypt.
2 Department of Pharmaceutical Technology, National Research Center, Dokki, Giza, Egypt.
3 Faculty of Pharmacy and Pharmaceutical Industries, Sinai University, Sinai, Egypt.
Abstract
Purpose: The current work aimed to develop
promising Fexofenadine hydrochloride (FXD)
liquisolid tablets able to increase its
oral bioavailability and
shorten time
to reach maximum plasma concentrations (Tmax).
Methods: Eighteen liquisolid powders
were developed based on 3 variables; (i) vehicle type [Propylene glycol (PG) or
Cremophor® EL (CR)], (ii) carrier [Avicel®
PH102] to coat [Aerosil® 200] ratio (15, 20, 25) and (iii) FXD
concentration in vehicle (30, 35, 40 %, w/w). Pre-compression studies involved identification of
physicochemical interactions and FXD crystallinity (FT-IR, DSC, XRD),
topographic visualization (SEM) and estimation of flow properties (angle of repose, Carr’s
index, Hausner’s ratio). CR-based liquisolid powders were
compressed as liquisolid tablets (LST 9 – 18) and evaluated for
weight-variation, drug-content, friability-percentage, disintegration-time and
drug-release. The pharmacokinetics of LST-18 was evaluated in healthy
volunteers relative to Allegra®
tablets.
Results: Pre-compression studies confirmed FXD dispersion in vehicles,
conversion to amorphous form and formation of liquisolid powders. CR-based liquisolid powders showed acceptable-to-good flow properties suitable for compaction.
CR-based LSTs had
appropriate physicochemical properties and short disintegration times. Release
profile of LST-18 showed a complete drug
release within 5 min.
Conclusion: LST-18 succeeded in increasing oral FXD
bioavailability by 62% and reducing Tmax to 2.16 h.