Introduction: Dry powder inhalers (DPIs) are popular for pulmonary drug delivery. Various techniques have been employed to produce inhalation drug particles and improve the delivery efficiency of DPI formulations. Physical stability of these DPI formulations is critical to ensure the delivery of a reproducible dose to the airways over the shelf-life.Areas covered: This review focuses on the impact of solid-state stability on aerosolization performance of DPI drug particles manufactured by powder production approaches and particle engineering techniques. It also highlights the different analytical tools that can be used to characterize the physical instability originating from production and storage.Expert opinion: A majority of the DPI literature focuses on the effects of physico-chemical properties such as size, morphology and density on aerosolization. While little has been reported on the physical stability, particularly the stability of engineered drug particles for use in DPIs. Literature data have shown that different particle engineering methods and storage conditions may cause physical instability of dry powders for inhalation and can significantly change the aerosol performance. A systematic examination of physical instability mechanisms in DPI formulations is necessary during formulation development in order to select the optimum formulation with satisfactory stability. In addition, the use of appropriate characterization tools are critical to detect and understand physical instability during the development of DPI formulations.
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The aim of this study is to investigate the influence of excipients on physical and aerosolization stability of spray dried Ciprofloxacin dry powder inhaler formulations. The model drug, Ciprofloxacin hydrochloride, was co-spray dried with excipients such as disaccharides (sucrose, lactose, trehalose), mannitol and l-leucine. The spray dried samples were stored at two different relative humidity (RH) conditions of: (1) 20% and (2) 55% RH at 20 °C. Ciprofloxacin co-spray dried with disaccharides and l-leucine in the mass ratio of 1:1 demonstrated an increase in fine particle fraction (FPF) as compared with the spray dried Ciprofloxacin alone when stored at 20% RH. However, deterioration in FPF of Ciprofloxacin co-spray dried with disaccharide and mannitol was observed upon storage at 55% RH as compared to the corresponding formulations stored at 20% RH due to particle agglomeration. Whereas, 10% and 50% w/w l-leucine in the formulation showed no change in aerosol performance (FPF of 71.1 ± 3.5% and 79.5 ± 3.1%, respectively) when stored at 55% RH for 10 days as compared to 20% RH (FPF of 68.1 ± 0.3% and 73.6 ± 7.1%, respectively). l-Leucine demonstrated aerosolization stability by alleviating crystallization of Ciprofloxacin to some extent and preventing significant change in particle morphology. l-Leucine is well-recognized as aerosolization enhancer; our study has shown l-leucine is also a physical and aerosolization stabilizer for spray dried Ciprofloxacin DPI formulations. Such stability enhancing activities were attributed to the enrichment of l-leucine on the particle surface as confirmed by XPS data, and intermolecular interactions between l-leucine and Ciprofloxacin as measured by FT-IR.
This study provides a fundamental understanding in moisture-induced physical and aerosol instability of the spray dried powder formulations.
This study aimed to develop dry powder inhaler (DPI) combination formulations of ciprofloxacin and colistin for use in respiratory infections. Effects of colistin on physical stability and aerosolization of spray-dried ciprofloxacin were examined. The combination DPI formulations were produced by co-spray drying colistin and ciprofloxacin in mass ratios of 1:1, 1:3, and 1:9. Colistin and ciprofloxacin were also co-sprayed with l-leucine in the mass ratio of 1:1:1. The physical and aerosolization stability of the selected co-sprayed formulations stored at 20, 55, and 75% relative humidity (RH) were examined. Formulation characterizations were carried out using powder X-ray diffraction (PXRD) for crystallinity, scanning electron microscopy for morphology and particle size distribution, and dynamic vapor sorption for moisture sorption. Particle surface analysis was performed using X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy, energy dispersive X-ray spectrometry, and nano-time-of-flight secondary ion mass spectrometry. Potential intermolecular interactions were studied using Fourier-transform infrared spectroscopy (FTIR). Aerosol performance was evaluated using a multistage liquid impinger with a RS01 monodose inhaler device. PXRD diffractograms showed that the co-spray-dried colistin-ciprofloxacin formulation in the mass ratio (1:1) was amorphous at 55% RH for up to 60 days; whereas the co-spray-dried colistin-ciprofloxacin (1:3) and colistin-ciprofloxacin (1:9) crystallized after storage for 3 days at 55% RH. However, the extent of crystallization for the combination formulations was less as compared to the spray-dried ciprofloxacin alone formulation. Surface morphology of the co-spray-dried formulations at different concentrations did not change even after storage at 55% RH for 60 days, unlike the spray-dried ciprofloxacin alone powder which became rougher after 3 days of storage at 55% RH. Surface analysis data indicated surface enrichment of colistin in the co-spray-dried formulations. Increasing colistin concentration on the composite particles surfaces improved aerosol performance of ciprofloxacin. FTIR data demonstrated intermolecular interactions between colistin and ciprofloxacin, thereby delaying and/or preventing crystallization of ciprofloxacin when co-spray-dried. Co-spray drying ciprofloxacin with colistin in the mass ratio (1:1) completely prevented crystallization of ciprofloxacin at 55% RH for up to 60 days. However, the colistin-ciprofloxacin formulation (1:1) began to fuse when stored at 75% RH due to moisture absorption resulting in a compromised aerosol performance. In contrast, the colistin-ciprofloxacin-leucine (1:1:1) formulation demonstrated no particle fusion, enabling a stable aerosol performance at 75% RH for 7 days. This study demonstrated that incorporation of colistin in the spray-dried formulations can improve physical stability and aerosolization of amorphous ciprofloxacin at 55% RH. At 75% RH, further addition of l-leucine in the formulation prevented particle fusion and deterioration in aeros...
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