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Preparation, characterization, and formulation development of drugdrug protic ionic liquids of diphenhydramine with ibuprofen and naproxen Chenguang Wang, Sujay A. Chopade, Yiwang Guo, Julia T. Early, Boxin Tang, En Wang, Marc A. Hillmyer, Timothy P. Lodge, and Changquan Calvin Sun Mol. Pharmaceutics, Just Accepted Manuscript • DOI: 10.1021/acs.molpharmaceut.8b00569 • Publication Date (Web): 23 Jul 2018 Downloaded from http://pubs.acs.org on July 23, 2018
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Molecular Pharmaceutics
Preparation, characterization, and formulation development of drug-drug protic ionic liquids of diphenhydramine with ibuprofen and naproxen
Chenguang Wang,†,# Sujay A. Chopade,‡,# Yiwang Guo,† Julia T. Early,§ Boxin Tang,‡ En Wang,‡ Marc A. Hillmyer,§ Timothy P. Lodge,‡,§ and Changquan Calvin Sun†,*
†
Pharmaceutical Materials Science and Engineering Laboratory, Department of Pharmaceutics,
College of Pharmacy; ‡Department of Chemical Engineering and Materials Science, and §
Department of Chemistry, University of Minnesota, Minneapolis, Minnesota 55455-0431,
United States
# C.W. and S.A.C. contributed equally.
*Corresponding author Changquan Calvin Sun, Ph.D. 9-127B Weaver-Densford Hall 308 Harvard Street S.E. Minneapolis, MN 55455 Email:
[email protected] Tel: 612-624-3722 Fax: 612-626-2125
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ABSTRACT
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Diphenhydramine (DPH) has been used with ibuprofen (IBU) or naproxen (NAP) in combined
3
therapies to provide better clinical efficacy as an analgesic and sleep aid. We discovered that
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DPH can form protic ionic liquids (PILs) with IBU and NAP, which opens the opportunity for a
5
new delivery mode of these combination drugs. [DPH][IBU] and [DPH][NAP] PILs exhibit low
6
ionicity, as confirmed by FT-IR and 1H NMR spectroscopy, and accompanied by low diffusivity,
7
high viscosity, and poor ionic conductivity. Evaluation of pharmaceutical properties of the two
8
PILs showed that these PILs, despite high solubility and good wettability, exhibited low
9
dissolution rates, owing to the poor dispersion of the PIL drops and the resultant small surface
10
area during dissolution. However, when loaded into a mesoporous carrier, the PIL-carrier
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composites exhibited improved dissolution rates along with excellent flow properties and easy
12
handling. Oral capsules of both PILs were developed using such composites. Such capsule
13
products exhibited acceptable drug release and bioavailability as demonstrated by a predictive
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artificial stomach‐duodenum dissolution test.
15 16
KEYWORDS: ionic liquids, drug combinations, active pharmaceutical ingredients, ionicity,
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dissolution, particle engineering
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Molecular Pharmaceutics
INTRODUCTION
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The use of synergistic drug combinations has become popular due to the improvement in
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compliance, safety, and effectiveness.1-3 Examples of drug-drug combinations with commercial
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success include sulfamethoxazole/trimethoprim (Bactrim), carbidopa/levodopa (Sinemet),
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fluticasone/salmeterol (Advair Diskus), isoniazid/rifampicin (IsonaRif), niacin/lovastatin
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(Advicor), zidovudine/lamivudine (Combivir),4 and valsartan/sacubitril (Entresto).5 The recently
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approved valsartan/sacubitril combination is more effective than the current first-line drug of
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enalapril in reducing the risk of death from cardiovascular causes or hospitalization for heart
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failure.6 The potential clinical benefits and the increasing level of difficulty in developing a new
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chemical entity have attracted interest in developing drug-drug combinations.7
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Diphenhydramine (DPH, Scheme 1) is a first-generation H1-receptor antagonist and is
29
used as a sedative, hypnotic, antihistamine, and antiemetic agent.8 Combinations of DPH with
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the non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs ibuprofen (IBU) or naproxen (NAP) (Scheme 1) are
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commercialized as Advil PM® and Aleve PM®, respectively. They exhibit superior analgesic
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efficacy and provide better nighttime sleep quality over their individual dosage forms. The
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bilayer tablet is used to deliver these drug combinations. However, manufacturing bilayer tablets
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requires a specialized tableting press and tends to face more manufacturing problems than single
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layer tablets,9 such as layer splitting.10
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New combination drugs could be assembled through crystal engineering, such as salt and
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co-crystal formation, where two drug molecules are linked together through reversible
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intermolecular interactions without changing their pharmacological profiles.11 Successful
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examples include Entresto, a co-crystal hydrate between sacubitril sodium and valsartan, and a
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salt co-crystal between tramadol hydrochloride and celecoxib.12-14 During the effort to prepare
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new crystal forms of DPH with IBU and NAP, where ∆pKa between the protonated DPH and
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IBU is 3.9 and that between protonated DPH and NAP is 4.4, we found that the two drug
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combinations formed liquids at room temperature. 3 ACS Paragon Plus Environment
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ILs are salts with low melting points (below 100 °C), comprised mostly of organic ions.
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ILs have attracted considerable attention by virtue of their appealing physical characteristics,
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such as non-volatility and high thermal, chemical, and electrochemical stability.15 They also have
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broader applicability due to their favorable ionic conductivity and attractive physical properties
48
as solvents for electrochemical processes, their crucial role in various emerging technologies,
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including fuel cells, batteries, and bio-catalysts, as well as delivery of pharmaceutical actives.16-24
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In contrast to common solid forms, pharmaceutical ILs offer another effective approach to
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modifying the drug physicochemical and biopharmaceutical properties, including solubility,
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dissolution rate, permeability, stability, and bioavailability.25-30 One advantage of ILs is the
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absence of the polymorphism issue.31 The protic IL (PIL) is a subclass of IL that is formed
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between Brönsted acid (AH) and Brönsted base (B) through proton transfer.21, 32 Neutral acid and
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base species could be observed in PILs, where ionicity depends on degree of complete of proton
56
transfer during the equilibrium shown in eq. 1.33-35
57 58
AH + B ⇌ A − H ··· B ⇌ BH + A
(1)
The degrees of ionicity can significantly affect viscosity, conductivity, and permeability.
34
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PILs with low ionicity are sometimes termed poor ionic liquids,32 or deep eutectic liquid co-
60
crystals.36, 37 They are different from deep eutectic solvents.36, 38
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In this study, PILs of DPH with two common drugs, NAP and IBU, were synthesized and
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characterized. Their solubility and dissolution were systematically assessed. Although ILs have
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many potential advantages, they can be difficult to handle during pharmaceutical manufacturing.
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To enable the development of PILs based oral solid product, a mesoporous carrier was used as a
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delivery vehicle to render good processability. Thus, this work exemplifies the study of
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pharmaceutical PILs, from PIL synthesis and characterization to the development of oral solid
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formulations exhibiting desired dissolution properties. We note that the 1:1 stoichiometry of
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both PILs between two drugs differs from the relative ratios in commercial Advil® PM or Aleve®
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PM combo formulations. Thus, this work demonstrates the possible advantages of such PILs and 4 ACS Paragon Plus Environment
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Molecular Pharmaceutics
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their pharmaceutical development but does not suggest direct replacement of their commercial
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combo tablet products.
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Scheme 1. Molecular structure of diphenhydramine (MW = 255 g/mol), (±) ibuprofen (MW = 206 g/mol), and (-) naproxen (MW = 230 g/mol).
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EXPERIMENTAL SECTION
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Materials
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Diphenhydramine hydrochloride ([DPH][HCl]), racemic sodium ibuprofen ([Na][IBU]),
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and (S)-naproxen were purchased from Sigma Aldrich (St. Louis, MO). (S)-Naproxen sodium
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([Na][NAP]) was purchased from Spectrum Chemical Mfg. Corp (New Brunswick, NJ), a
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mesoporous silica, Aeroperl® 300 Pharma, was donated by Evonik Inc. (Essen, Germany), and
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racemic ibuprofen was donated by BASF Chemical Co. (Ludwigshafen, Germany).
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Diphenhydramine free base was prepared by neutralizing [DPH][HCl] with sodium hydroxide
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solution and then extracted by ethyl acetate. All other materials were used as received.
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Synthesis of PILs
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PILs were prepared via a metathesis reaction between [DPH][HCl] and [Na][IBU] or
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[Na][NAP].39,
40
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methanol. To this stirred solution, 50 mL of [DPH][HCl] methanol solution (0.2 M) was slowly
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added (Scheme 2). The reaction mixture was heated to 40 °C and stirred vigorously for 48 h.
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Methanol was then removed using a rotary evaporator, and 100 mL of dichloromethane was
In a round bottom flask, [Na][IBU] (10 mmol) was dissolved in 50 mL
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added to the reaction mixture. The mixture was washed 3 times with deionized water to remove
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NaCl. After separation, magnesium sulfate was placed in the organic phase and vigorously
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shaken to remove water. The solvent in the filtered solution was removed using a rotary
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evaporator (ca. 100 mTorr) at 35 °C. Subsequently, the [DPH][IBU] PIL was dried at 50 °C
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under vacuum (ca. 10 mTorr) for 24 h. A similar method was followed to prepare [DPH][NAP]
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PIL using [Na][NAP] and [DPH][Cl] (Scheme 2), except deionized water was used to replace
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methanol in the metathesis reaction.
95 96 97
Scheme 2. Synthesis of [DPH][NAP] and [DPH][IBU] PILs from their respective commercial salts via metathesis reactions.
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Formulation of PILs
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Each PIL was dissolved in methanol to obtain a 0.2 g/mL solution. The solution was
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added to the mesoporous silica powder at 1:1 ratio (v/w). The wet powder was dried at 40 °C in a
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vacuum oven for 48 h to remove the methanol. The dried powders contained ~20% (w/w) PILs.
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Vibrational Spectroscopy
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A confocal Raman microscope (Alpha300 R, WITec, Ulm, Germany) was used to
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acquire the spectra of the PILs and raw materials. The laser source was set at 532 nm with an
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integration time of 10 s. The average spectrum of two accumulations was obtained for each
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sample. IR spectra of PILs were collected using a spectrometer (Nicolet iS50, Thermo Scientific,
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Waltham, MA) with a built-in diamond attenuated total reflection with DLaTGS detector. For 6 ACS Paragon Plus Environment
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Molecular Pharmaceutics
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each sample, 32 scans were averaged. IR data in the range of 4000–450 cm–1 at a resolution of 2
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cm–1 were processed using the software OMNIC 9.2.
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Mass Spectrometry (ESI-MS) and Elemental Analysis
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Accurate mass measurements of PILs were acquired by direct infusion electrospray
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ionization mass spectrometry on a mass spectrometer (BioTOF II, Bruker, Billerica, MA). Both
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samples were dissolved in methanol. The cations were analyzed in positive ion mode and the
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anions in negative ion mode. The elemental analyses of the PILs were performed on a CHN
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analyzer (Perkin Elmer 2400, Waltham, MA).
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Pulsed-Field-Gradient 1H NMR Spectroscopy (PFG-NMR)
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1
H and PFG-NMR spectroscopy were performed using a 500 MHz NMR spectrometer
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(Avance III, Bruker, Billerica, MA) equipped with a 5-mm triple resonance broad band pulsed-
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field gradient probe. The PIL sample was placed in the outer tube of a coaxial NMR tube setup
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with d6-dimethyl sulfoxide (DMSO) filled in the inset tube.41 All PFG-NMR experiments were
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performed for 1H nuclei with DOSY using the longitudinal eddy current delay experiment using
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bipolar gradients acquired in 2D mode pulse sequence.42 Self-diffusion coefficients of the PIL
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constituent species were determined in the temperature range of 27–71 °C. At each temperature,
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the PIL sample was equilibrated for at least 30 min before conducting the NMR experiment. The
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translational diffusion coefficients were obtained by using eq. 2: (2)
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where I/I0 is the attenuated intensity (I) at various gradient strengths (G) from 2 to 98% of the
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maximum G (0.47 T/m) normalized to I0 at G = 0, and γ is the 1H gyromagnetic ratio (42.6
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MHz/T). Signal attenuation was detected using a diffusion time (∆) of 0.7 s and a gradient pulse
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time (δ) of 3 ms for [DPH][IBU]; for [DPH][NAP] ∆ was 0.8 s, and δ was 3 ms. The PFG-NMR
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results were processed using Top Spin 3.5vl7 software package.
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Thermal Analysis 7 ACS Paragon Plus Environment
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Thermal properties of PILs were characterized by differential scanning calorimetry
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(DSC) using a Discovery Calorimeter (TA Instruments, New Castle, DE). Samples were packed
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into aluminum T-zero pans and hermetically sealed with aluminum lids, and subjected to three
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cycles of cooling and heating at 10 °C/min over the temperature range from –90 °C to 90 °C. The
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cell was purged with dry nitrogen at 50 mL/min. Thermogravimetric analysis (TGA) of the PIL
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samples was performed on a thermogravimetric analyzer (Q500, TA Instruments, New Castle,
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DE) under 60 mL/min N2 at a heating rate of 10 °C/min from room temperature to 450 °C.
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Viscosity Measurements
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Rheological measurements were carried out on a rheometer (AR-G2, TA Instruments,
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New Castle, DE) with Peltier temperature control, using the 25 mm parallel plate geometry.
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Steady shear rate sweep experiments were conducted over the range from 1 to 100 s–1 at
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temperatures from 25 ºC to 65 ºC in 10 ºC intervals, while maintaining a constant plate-to-plate
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gap (≈ 0.8 mm) by taking into account thermal expansion of the tools.
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Impedance Spectroscopy
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Ionic conductivity of the PILs was measured by 2-point probe AC impedance
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spectroscopy using a frequency response analyzer (Solartron 1255B, West Sussex, UK) and an
148
electrochemical interface (SI 1287). The viscous PIL sample was contained in a Teflon spacer
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sandwiched between two stainless steel blocking electrodes in a home-built sealed conducting
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cell.43 The conductivity measurements were performed over the temperature range from 25 to 65
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°C by applying an alternating voltage signal of 100 mV in the frequency range of 1 – 106 Hz.
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The ionic conductivity, σ, was calculated as l/(RA), where l and A are the sample thickness and
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superficial area of the sample (determined by the geometry of the Teflon spacer) and R is the
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bulk resistance. Bulk resistance was determined from the minimum in the Nyquist plot (higher x-
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intercept of the semi-circle) of the negative imaginary component of the impedance, Z′′, versus
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the real component of the impedance, Z′. A set of representative raw impedance data is shown in
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Figure S1. 8 ACS Paragon Plus Environment
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Molecular Pharmaceutics
Contact Angle Measurement
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Contact angles were measured using the sessile drop method on a goniometer (DM-CE1,
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Kyowa Interface Science, Saitama, Japan). A drop of the PIL was sandwiched between two clean
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glass slides in orthogonal direction. One slide was moved along the long axis of another glass
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slide to produce a flat liquid film. The contact angle of the liquid film was recorded as a function
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of time. A drop of distilled water (∼3 µL) was placed on the surface of the films using a fine
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needle attached to a dispenser. The shape of the water drop was recorded every 1 s for 30 s using
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a high-speed camera. The angle between the sample surface and the tangent line at the edge of
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the drop was determined using image analysis software, FAMAS3.72 (Kyowa Interface Science
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Co. Ltd., Japan). Six measurements were made at different locations on each film, and the mean
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and standard deviations were calculated.
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Dynamic Water Vapor Sorption Isotherm
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Water sorption isotherms of the materials were obtained using an automated vapor
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sorption analyzer (Intrinsic DVS, Surface Measurement Systems Ltd., Allentown, PA) at 25 °C.
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The nitrogen flow rate was 50 mL/min. Each sample was first purged with dry nitrogen until a
173
constant weight was obtained. Then, the sample was exposed to a series of relative humidities
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(RH) from 0% to 95% with the step size of 5% RH. At each specific RH, the equilibration
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criterion of either dm/dt ≤ 0.002% with a minimum equilibration time of 0.5 h or a maximum
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equilibration time of 6 h was applied. The RH was changed to the next target value once one of
177
the criteria was met.
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Powder X-ray Diffraction
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Formulations of PILs were characterized using a powder X-ray diffractometer
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(PANalytical X'pert pro, Westborough, MA) with Cu Kα radiation. PXRD patterns were
181
obtained by scanning samples from 5° to 35° with a step size of 0.017° and 2 s dwell time at
182
room temperature. The tube voltage and amperage were set at 40 kV and 40 mA, respectively.
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Powder Flowability 9 ACS Paragon Plus Environment
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Powder flow properties of PILs formulation were characterized using a ring shear tester
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(RST-XS, Dietmar Schulze, Wolfenbüttel, Germany). A 30 mL volume shear cell was used to
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measure the flowability at 1 kPa preshear normal stress. Shear strength was determined under
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five progressively increasing normal stresses of 230, 400, 550, 700, and 850 Pa and used to
188
construct a yield locus, from which the unconfined yield strength and major principal stress were
189
obtained and powder flowability index (ffc) was calculated. The test was repeated three times
190
using fresh samples.
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Thermodynamic Solubility
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The solubilities of the PILs, IBU, and NAP free acids were determined by equilibrating
193
excess amount of each sample (200 mg) in ~5 mL of water or a pH 6.8 phosphate buffer at 25 °C
194
under vigorous stirring for more than 72 h. The suspensions were filtered using 0.45 µm
195
membrane filters. The concentration of filtrates was determined by UV spectroscopy (Ocean
196
Optics, Inc., Dunedin, FL) after appropriate dilution.
197
Single vessel Dissolution Test
198
Dissolution rates were determined in 250 mL sodium phosphate buffer (pH = 6.8) at 37
199
°C. The medium was stirred with an overhead stirrer at 80 rpm. As prepared PIL or its
200
formulation was filled into a clear capsule shell (size 2) and placed in the dissolution medium.
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For [DPH][NAP], absorption spectra are sufficient different to allow monitoring the release of
202
individual drug substance from these capsules using a fiber optic probe for UV spectroscopy
203
(Ocean Optics, Inc., Dunedin, FL). The original drug concentration UV absorption spectrum,
204
over the wavelength range from 200–400 nm, was processed by Oceanview 1.5.0 (Ocean Optics,
205
Inc., Dunedin, FL). Since the UV absorption spectra of DPH and IBU are almost superimposable
206
(Figure S2), their dissolution profiles could not be individually measured. Therefore, the sum of
207
their concentrations was determined based on absorption signal using a calibration curve (Figure
208
S3) to get a dissolution profile of both DPH and IBU.
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Artificial Stomach-Duodenum Dissolution (ASD) 10 ACS Paragon Plus Environment
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Molecular Pharmaceutics
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Dissolution of [DPH][NAP] was also determined using an artificial stomach-duodenum
211
(ASD) apparatus, which consists of two jacketed beakers with temperature control at 37 °C using
212
a water bath (Scheme 2). This apparatus simulates stomach and duodenum, where the fluid flow
213
is regulated by a programmatically controlled peristaltic Masterflex L/S Easy-Load II pump
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(Cole-Parmer, Vernon Hills, IL).44-46
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To simulate human physiological conditions in the fasted state, experiments were
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conducted with 0.01 N HCl (pH = 2) for the stomach and 0.1 M sodium phosphate buffer (pH =
217
6.8) for the duodenum. The initial volume of the stomach chamber was 250 mL, which was
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decreased to 50 mL by first-order emptying with a half-life of 15 min. The duodenum volume
219
was maintained at 30 mL throughout the entire study, achieved by setting a vacuum line in the
220
duodenum chamber at a calibrated height. In addition, the chambers were infused with fresh
221
gastric or duodenal secretion liquid at 2 mL/min to mimic in vivo secretion processes. Drug
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concentration was determined from second derivatives of absorbance signals obtained by a fiber
223
optic UV/Vis probe. Mixing was achieved by an overhead paddle stirrer in the stomach chamber
224
and a magnetic stirrer in the duodenum chamber. Prior to each experiment, calibration of all
225
pumps and spectrometers were performed. PILs and their formulations were filled into capsules.
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All fluids used in the experiment were degassed to avoid the introduction of bubbles that might
227
affect the real-time UV detection.
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The drug concentration-time profile in the duodenum was analyzed by PKsolver 2.0, and
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the non-compartmental method was used to calculate the peak plasma concentration (Cmax), time
230
to reach Cmax (Tmax), and area under the plasma concentration-time curve (AUC).47
231
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Scheme 3. Schematic diagram of the artificial stomach-duodenum apparatus.
234 235
RESULTS AND DISCUSSION
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Structural characterization of the PILs
237
The synthesized [DPH][IBU] and [DPH][NAP] PILs were clear, viscous liquids at room
238
temperature (Figure S4), whereas [DPH][Cl], [Na][IBU] dihydrate, and[Na][NAP] hydrate were
239
white powders. Characteristic peaks of both reactants were observed in the FT-IR and Raman
240
spectra of both PILs (Figure 1), which suggest the presence of [DPH] and the corresponding free
241
acids. (a)
(b)
242 243 244 245
Figure 1. a) FT-IR and b) Raman spectra of [DPH][IBU] and [DPH][NAP] PILs and their corresponding starting materials.
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Molecular Pharmaceutics
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The purity of the PILs was confirmed by NMR spectroscopy, mass spectrometry, and
247
elemental analysis. The detailed 1H, 13C NMR spectroscopy results are provided in Figure S5. A
248
silver nitrate test was also performed to confirm the absence of chloride ions in the final
249
products.
250
The most significant change in 1H NMR spectra after formation of [DPH][NAP] and
251
[DPH][IBU] is in the chemical shifts of the methine and methyl protons alpha to the carboxylate
252
(∆δ = 0.1 – 0.4 ppm). In general, the 1H chemical shifts for both anions shifted downfield. The
253
opposite trend was observed for the cations, as the 1H chemical shifts generally shifted upfield
254
with respect to the hydrochloride salt precursors. For the [DPH], the methyl and methine protons
255
adjacent to the amine exhibited significant upfield shifts (∆δ = 0.6 – 0.8 ppm). The carboxylic
256
acid proton is observed in both [DPH][NAP] and [DPH][IBU] at 9.66 ppm and 11.76 ppm,
257
respectively. The chemical shift of this proton in the [DPH][Cl] precursor is 10.67 ppm.
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The ESI-MS spectra of [DPH][IBU] and [DPH][NAP] were obtained in both positive and
259
negative modes to analyze both the anion and cation structures. In positive mode, the molecular
260
ion with m/z 256.2 corresponds with the [DPH]+ cation for both PILs. In negative mode, the
261
[NAP]– anion has an m/z of 229.1, whereas the m/z of 205.1 corresponds with the [IBU]– anion.
262
Elemental analyses of the [DPH][IBU] and [DPH][NAP] PILs yielded results close to those
263
calculated from molecular formulas (Table S1).
264
Thermal properties
265
Both PILs exhibit sub-zero glass transition temperatures (Tg): –39 °C for [DPH][IBU]
266
and –17 °C for [DPH][NAP] (Figure 2a). The lower Tg of [DPH][IBU] suggests weaker cohesive
267
energy between the constituent species, which is consistent with its lower viscosity, higher
268
diffusion coefficient and ionic conductivity.21 No melting point was observed for either PILs.
269
This indicates that the PILs do not crystallize and consequently will not exhibit polymorphism,
270
which is a significant advantage for pharmaceutical manufacturing and stability.31 TGA results
271
suggested one-step decomposition with thermal stability up to 160 °C for both PILs (Figure 2b). 13 ACS Paragon Plus Environment
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272
For comparison, DPH is a liquid at room temperature, while its commercial form hydrochloride
273
salt, [DPH][HCl], is a crystalline solid with a melting point of 170 °C.8 Additionally, both NAP
274
and IBU are known to exhibit polymorphism.48, 49
Figure 2. (a) DSC thermograms of the PILs. The traces represent the second heating cycle (exothermic flow down). (b) Thermogravimetric curves of the IL samples, Tonset 5% is the temperature corresponding to 5% mass loss.
275
Ionicity of PILs
276
The ionicity of the PILs, i.e., the percentage of dissociated ions present in the system,
277
dictates both the physicochemical properties, such as density and viscosity, and the
278
pharmaceutical performance, such as membrane permeability.50 Low ionicity in PILs results in
279
low self-diffusion coefficients and high viscosities, as well as poor ionic conductivities.
280
However, for pharmaceutical PILs, lower ionicity is desirable because it favors higher
281
permeability through biological membranes compared to drugs in their ionic form.30
282
In the case of acid/base crystalline complexes, the proton transfer occurs more than 80%
283
of the cases for ∆pKa ≥ 3.51 The ∆pKa in the two PILs was ~3.9 or ~4.4 since the pKa’s of
284
protonated DPH, IBU, and NAP are 8.76±0.28, 4.84±0.30 and 4.41±0.10, respectively.
285
However, the FT-IR spectra indicated that the two PILs had relatively low ionicity (Figure 3).
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Molecular Pharmaceutics
286
The C=O stretch in the functional groups of COOH and COO- are clearly distinguished in the
287
range of 1500-1800 cm–1 for IBU/[Na][IBU] and NAP/[Na][NAP] (Figure 3a & 3b). The main
288
corresponding IR peak of PILs match well with the non-ionic forms of IBU or NAP, and only a
289
small absorbance shoulder corresponds to their ionic forms ([Na][IBU] /[Na][NAP]).
290
Additionally, the NH+ function group stretch (2700 - 2400 cm-1) observed in [DPH][HCl] is
291
absent in both PILs, suggesting little ionization of DPH in [DPH][IBU] and [DPH][NAP] as well
292
(Figure 3c). Collectively, the FTIR data show that both PILs are largely un-ionized. In DPH-
293
containing crystal structures, strong charge assisted N+–H···O or N+–H···Cl- hydrogen bonds are
294
usually observed.8 In contrast, the poor ionicity of the [DPH][IBU] and [DPH][NAP] PILs
295
suggested the major intermolecular interactions are O–H···N hydrogen bonding. Therefore, the
296
∆pKa rule for proton transfer in crystalline phases is not applicable to PILs.51
297
observation was made in the liquid lidocaine-fatty acid complexes, where the un-ionized
298
molecular form was observed when ∆pKa ≈ 3.36, 52
A similar
299
The ionicity of [DPH][IBU] and [DPH][NAP] PILs was quantified using an 1H NMR
300
method (see Supporting Information for the analysis).35 Chemical shifts of the conjugate acid
301
(δBH+) and base in the ionic liquid complex (δBPIL) were well-resolved, as shown in Table 1.
302
The two proton signals from the [DPH]+ cation spectrum used in the analysis were the methyl
303
and methine protons adjacent to the amine. The chemical shifts for the free base (δB) were
304
obtained from previous reports.20 The NMR analysis results (Table 1) show that both PILs
305
exhibit incomplete proton transfer from the two acids to the base, 8-10% in [DPH][IBU] and 6-
306
7% in [DPH][NAP].
307
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Page 16 of 32
(b)
(a)
(c)
308 309 310 311 312 313
Figure 3. FT-IR spectra in the 1800 – 1000 cm-1 range for a) [DPH][IBU], b) [DPH][NAP], and c) 2700 – 2400 cm-1 for both [DPH][IBU] and [DPH][NAP]. The dotted line represents the stretch of -COOH (red), -COO- (blue) functional groups.
Table 1. 1H NMR data and the percentage of ionized complex (% salt)
314 PIL
Proton NMR
δB (ppm)
δBPIL (ppm)
δBH+ (ppm)
%B
% salt
[DPH][IBU]
-CH2N(CH3)2
2.49
2.59
3.47
90
10
-CH2N(CH3)2
2.16
2.22
2.90
92
8
-CH2N(CH3)2
2.49
2.56
3.47
93
7
-CH2N(CH3)2
2.16
2.20
2.90
94
6
[DPH][NAP]
315
To further confirm the low ionicity of these PILs, self-diffusion coefficients, viscosities
316
and ionic conductivities were measured. The species in [DPH][IBU] (free ions, ion pairs, and 16 ACS Paragon Plus Environment
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317
higher aggregates) diffuse much faster than those in [DPH][NAP], about an order of magnitude
318
faster at 50 oC (Figure 4a). Notably, these diffusion coefficients are significantly lower than the
319
ionic species (≈10–10 m2/s at room temperature) in alkylimidazolium bis(trifluoromethane
320
sulfonyl)imide PILs that exhibit high ionicity (> 60%).53 The DPH species in [DPH][NAP]
321
diffuse about ten times slower than those in [DPH][IBU] (Tables S2 and S3), which reflects the
322
lower ionicity and stronger ion-association in [DPH][NAP] (Table 1). The significantly higher
323
viscosities of [DPH][NAP] than [DPH][IBU], e.g., two orders of magnitude difference at 25 °C,
324
(Figure 4b) also suggests stronger intermolecular interactions in [DPH][NAP].21
325 326 327 328
Figure 4. a) Temperature dependence of summation of cationic and anionic diffusion coefficients, b) shear viscosity of the PILs at a shear rate of 1 s–1.
329
Low ionicity of a PIL has its biggest impact on the ionic conductivity, since transport of
330
ion-pairs or other neutral ion-aggregates does not contribute to it. Figure 5 summarizes the ionic
331
conductivity as a function of temperature. The order of magnitude lower ionic conductivity for
332
[DPH][NAP] compared to [DPH][IBU] can be attributed to the combined effects of a) lower
333
diffusivities (Figure 4a) and higher viscosity (Figure 4b) of [DPH][NAP], b) higher glass
334
transition temperature (Figure 2a), and c) lower concentration of free ions (Tables S1-S2). Figure
335
5 also provides a comparison of the ionic conductivity measured by impedance spectroscopy
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Page 18 of 32
336
(open symbols) and the ionic conductivity, σ, calculated using diffusion coefficients (filled
337
symbols) from PFG-NMR experiments via the Nernst−Einstein equation: σ =
F2 + + c D + c−D− RT
(
)
(3)
338
where c+ and c– are the molar concentration of the ionic species, F is Faraday’s constant, R is the
339
gas constant and T is temperature. Ionic conductivity estimation using eq. 3 assumes that the
340
PILs are composed of fully dissociated free ions alone. Comparing the measured ionic
341
conductivity to the calculated value indicates that less than 10% of [DPH][IBU] and less than 5%
342
of [DPH][NAP] exists as free ions. This is consistent with the ionicity estimated using NMR
343
analysis (Table 1).
344 345 346 347 348
Figure 5. Temperature dependence of measured ionic conductivity (open symbols) and calculated ionic conductivity (filled symbols) using PFG-NMR diffusion coefficients via the Nernst−Einstein equation for (a) [DPH][IBU] and (b) [DPH][NAP] PILs.
349
The low ionicity firmly established by complementary techniques suggests that both
350
liquids are expected to contain predominantly H-bonded A − H ··· B complexes instead of ions
351
resulting from complete transfer of proton.
352
Hygroscopicity
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Molecular Pharmaceutics
353
Absorbed moisture affects the physical and chemical properties of PILs,54 which can
354
present a problem to pharmaceutical processing. The use of magnesium sulfate during PIL
355
preparation was effective in removing residual water since TGA data of these samples showed
356
no loss in weight up to 120 oC (Figure 2b). Figure 6a reveals that these PILs are moderately
357
hygroscopic based on the criteria from the European Pharmacopeia.55 The PILs gained weight
358
more than their surface absorption capacity with no hysteresis between sorption and desorption
359
curves, implying that water penetrated into the bulk of the PILs and that the curves correspond to
360
thermodynamic equilibrium between solution composition and water activity. The absorbed
361
water is less than 1% at RH below 20%. Thus, all the characterization experiments were
362
conducted in a low RH (5–15%) environment to minimize impact of water on analyses. As a
363
result, we did not encounter any processing problems associated with hygroscopicity.
364
Moisture sorption isotherms of both [Na][IBU] and [Na][NAP] suggested physical
365
stability problems (Figure S6), where anhydrous [Na][IBU] took up a significant amount of
366
water when the RH was raised above 25% during sorption. The weight increase matched well
367
with the theoretical water content of a dihydrate form (15.7%). On desorption, the [Na][IBU]
368
dihydrate maintained stability over the 10 – 95% RH range but lost water below 10% to form the
369
anhydrate. [Na][NAP] undergoes a more complicated solid-state transformation during the
370
moisture sorption and desorption cycle. The anhydrous [Na][NAP] transformed to dihydrate
371
(theoretical water content 15.6 %) in the RH range of 60% – 70% and then a tetrahydrate
372
(theoretical water content 31.2 %) in the RH range of 75% – 95% (Figure S6). On desorption, the
373
[Na][NAP] tetrahydrate started to lose water when the RH was below 55% and maintained water
374
close to the dihydrate between 30% and 45% RH. Further decrease in RH led to gradual loss of
375
water with no distinct plateau region until 5%, at which all water was lost to form the anhydrate.
376
This is in excellent agreement with that reported in the literature.56 The [DPH][HCl] deliquesced
377
when the RH was higher than 85% (Figure S6), which is consistent with its high aqueous
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Page 20 of 32
378
solubility.8 The lack of such physical form changes is an advantage of the two PILs over their
379
parent salts.
380 (a)
(b)
381 382 383
Figure 6. (a) Moisture sorption and desorption of PILs, (b) dependence of IL-water contact angle on time.
384 385
Wettability and solubility
386
The relatively low water contact angles (CA) of the PILs suggest good wettability (Figure
387
6b). The CAs of both PILs decreased with time, but the CA of [DPH][IBU] was always much
388
lower than that of [DPH][NAP] (Figure 6b), suggesting better wettability for [DPH][IBU]. The
389
CA of [DPH][IBU] is also significantly lower than that of IBU (88°),57 suggesting improved
390
wettability upon PIL formation.
391
Both IBU and NAP free acids are poorly soluble drugs with pH-dependent solubility
392
profiles, and several approaches have been attempted to address the solubility issues.58-60 In a
393
simplified thermodynamic solubility model, both the solvation and crystal lattice energy are key
394
factors determining the crystal solubility.61 Because the formation of PILs eliminates the lattice
395
energies of IBU and NAP crystals, a higher solubility is expected for the PILs. In fact, the
396
thermodynamic solubility of [DPH][IBU] (8.3 ± 0.5 mM) and [DPH][NAP] (4.1 ± 0.8 mM) in 20 ACS Paragon Plus Environment
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Molecular Pharmaceutics
397
water is about eight to ten times greater than IBU (1.03 ± 0.05 mM) and NAP (0.46 ± 0.10 mM),
398
respectively. However, the pH was shifted after the solubility measurements, IBU (pH = 5.0),
399
NAP (pH = 5.2), [DPH][NAP] (pH = 6.4), and [DPH][IBU] (pH = 6.1). At the same equilibrium
400
solution pH of ~6.8, using a phosphate buffer as a medium, the solubility followed the order:
401
IBU (35.8 ± 7.9 mM) >NAP (11.6 ± 1.0 mM) > [DPH][IBU] (9.2 ± 0.1 mM) > [DPH][NAP]
402
(7.6 ± 1.1 mM). At pH 2, solubility of PILs could not be determined because of spontaneous
403
conversion to corresponding free acid, which means that solubility of PILs is greater than that of
404
free acids. The bioavailability of DPH is not affected by the choice of forms because its
405
therapeutic dose is fully dissolved regardless of the forms studied here.
406
Dissolution
407
With high water solubility and good wettability, the PILs were expected to exhibit a
408
favorable dissolution rate in water or low pH media. However, [DPH][IBU] and [DPH][NAP]
409
PILs in pH 6.8 medium displayed slow dissolution under the sink condition (Figure 7). This is
410
attributed to the lower solubility at 6.8 pH and small surface area of the PIL droplets. Both PILs
411
formed large liquid drops in the dissolution media upon disintegration of the capsule shell. The
412
drug concentration gradually increased, but only about 50% of the drug was released over 35
413
min.
414
Formulation development
415
As discussed above, the common solid forms of the three drugs, IBU, NAP, DPH,
416
[Na][IBU], [Na][NAP], and [DPH][HCl] all exhibit major deficiencies in pharmaceutical
417
properties. Formation of an PIL provides an alternative approach for modifying the state of
418
drugs, and therefore pharmaceutically important properties. However, compared to solids, one
419
disadvantage of a PIL is the handling difficulty during pharmaceutical manufacturing.28, 29 To
420
address this limitation and to harness the potential of these two PILs to improve drug delivery, a
421
particle engineering strategy was applied to both improve the processability, and to enhance the
422
dissolution by increasing surface area. 21 ACS Paragon Plus Environment
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423
Page 22 of 32
Mesoporous carrier-based formulation strategies have been used to deliver low-dose
424
drugs, taking advantages of their high specific surface area and excellent flowability.62,
425
Dispersing these PILs into the porous silica carrier is expected to be effective in improving
426
manufacturability, dissolution rates, and bioavailability. In fact, the PIL-carrier composites
427
displayed much better flowability than Avicel PH102, a commonly used reference powder that
428
marks acceptable flowability for high speed tableting (Table 2).64 Therefore, this particle
429
engineering strategy led to excellent flowability, which is expected to yield reproducible die
430
filling performance.65 In addition to ffc, other flow parameters, such as the effective angle of
431
internal friction, the angle of linearized yield locus, and angle of internal friction at steady state
432
flow, are also lower than those of Avicel PH102.
433
behavior of the composite powders suitable for high speed tablet manufacturing and capsule
434
filling.
65
63
Thus, they also suggest free-flowing
435
The absence of any crystalline characteristic peak in the PXRD patterns of PIL in carrier
436
indicates the drugs were in an amorphous state (Figure S7). Therefore, loading PILs into porous
437
carrier did not induce crystallization. In contrast to pure [DPH][NAP] PIL, the composite
438
formulation showed significantly improved dissolution rate in the single chamber dissolution
439
test, where the two drugs are released close to a 1:1 ratio (Figure 7a and 7b). This is reasonable
440
since no precipitation occurred during the entire course of dissolution. In all cases, nearly 90% of
441
the drug was released for [DPH][IBU] and [DPH][NAP] PIL capsules in 15 min.
442
dissolution profiles of [DPH][IBU] and [DPH][NAP] PILs composites with the carrier did not
443
significantly differ (Figure 7), despite the very different viscosity, diffusion coefficient, and
444
wettability.
The
445 446 447 448 449 22 ACS Paragon Plus Environment
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450
Molecular Pharmaceutics
Table 2. Flowability of IL formulations tested at 1kPa preshear normal stress.
Angle of linearized yield locus (o)
Angle of internal friction at steady state flow (o)
Sample name
ffc
Bulk density (mg/mL)
Effective angle of internal friction (o)
[DPH][IBU] IL formulation
20.00±1.73
307 ± 13
27.7±0.68
26.7±0.7
26.1±0.8
[DPH][NAP] IL formulation
19.3±0.6
296 ± 2
27.8±0.1
26.3±0.1
26.0±0.1
5.5 ± 0.42
373 ± 6
42.5 ± 0.5
38.0 ± 0.4
39.0 ± 0.4
Avicel PH102
65
451 (a)
(b)
(c)
452 453 454 455
Figure 7. Drug release profiles of a) [DPH] and b) [NAP] from [DPH][NAP] PIL and c) [DPH][IBU] PIL and PIL-carrier composite in pH 6.8 buffer solution. The dashed lines indicate the expected drug concentration upon full release. 23 ACS Paragon Plus Environment
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Page 24 of 32
456
When [DPH][NAP] PIL was assessed using the ASD apparatus, both DPH and NAP were
457
released more rapidly from the composite in the stomach chamber than the pure PIL (Figures 8a
458
and 8b). Also, increased AUC and Cmax as well as decreased Tmax were observed in the drug
459
release profiles obtained in the duodenum chamber for both NAP and DPH (Figure 8c and 8d,
460
Table 3). Since both DPH and NAP have good permeability and their absorption is limited by
461
dissolution, the better drug release profiles in the duodenum chamber indicate improved
462
bioavailability of the composite. (a)
Stomach
(b)
(c)
Duodenum
(d)
463 464 465 466
Figure 8. ASD profile of a) [NAP] and b) [DPH] from [DPH][NAP] PIL and PIL-carrier composite in the stomach and c) [NAP] and d) [DPH] from [DPH][NAP] PIL and PIL-carrier composite in the duodenum (n = 3).
467 24 ACS Paragon Plus Environment
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468
Molecular Pharmaceutics
Table 3. Simulated pharmacokinetic parameters of [DPH][NAP] PIL and PIL formulation (n=3) NAP
DPH
PIL
PIL-carrier
PIL
PIL-carrier
Tmax (min)
43±10
13.0±3
36±5
16±4
Cmax (mM)
0.03±0.01
0.13±0.03
0.11±0.01
0.20±0.03
AUC0-t (mM *min)
2.9±0.4
9± 1
5± 2
6 ±2
AUC0-inf (mM *min)
4.1±0.2
9± 1
6± 2
6 ±2
469 470
A rapid decrease in NAP concentration in the stomach occurred after 2 min, which may
471
indicate precipitation of the poorly soluble NAP. As discussed before, NAP and IBU exhibited
472
pH-dependent solubility profiles, whereas DPH is highly soluble over the whole pH range. We
473
hypothesized that the fast release of NAP from PIL led to a solution concentration much higher
474
than the saturation solubility of NAP at pH 2. The high degree of supersaturation led to
475
precipitation of NAP, which may cover the PIL surface to further retard NAP release. To test this
476
hypothesis, a few drops of dissolution media (pH = 2.0) were added to the PILs on a glass slide,
477
which was observed under a polarized light microscope. Precipitation of crystalline solids
478
happened within 2 mins. The precipitate was confirmed to be NAP free acid by PXRD (Figure
479
S8).
480
observation supports the hypothesis that precipitation of NAP was responsible for the observed
481
sharp decrease in the NAP concentration in the stomach chamber. Similar observations were
482
also made for [DPH][IBU] PIL (Figure S9). Such crystallization during dissolution can be
483
prevented by using appropriate polymers or other crystallization inhibitors.66-68
The amount of crystalline precipitate continued to grow with time (Figure 9). This
484 485
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Page 26 of 32
486 487 488
Figure 9. Polarized light microscope images showing the crystallization during dissolution of [DPH][NAP] PIL in pH 2.0 solution. The scale bar represents 500 µm.
489 490
CONCLUSIONS
491
Structural information, extracted from NMR spectroscopy, mass spectrometry, elemental
492
analysis, and infrared and Raman spectroscopy, confirmed that PILs of DPH with IBU and NAP
493
were successfully prepared. These two PILs exhibited unexpectedly low ionicity, which was
494
confirmed by a suite of complementary techniques. Excellent thermal stability, high viscosity,
495
improved water solubility, better water wettability, and absence of crystallization at room
496
temperature and high RHs, make these PILs an attractive approaches to alter the
497
physicochemical and biopharmaceutical properties of drugs. A mesoporous silica carrier was
498
used to overcome the challenges associated with handling and small droplet surface areas of the
499
PILs. The resulting free-flowing PIL-carrier composite powders were successfully used to
500
prepare capsules that exhibited rapid dissolution and improved bioavailability over pure PIL.
501 502
ASSOCIATED CONTENT
503
Supporting Information
504
NMR spectra, UV spectra, powder X-ray diffraction of PIL formulations and precipitate,
505
elemental analyses, diffusion coefficients, moisture sorption and desorption, polarized light
506
microscope image, and ionicity estimated using NMR analysis. This information is available free
507
of charge via the Internet at http://pubs.acs.org 26 ACS Paragon Plus Environment
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Molecular Pharmaceutics
508 509
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
510
Part of this work was carried out in the College of Science and Engineering Characterization
511
Facility, University of Minnesota, which has received capital equipment funding from the NSF
512
through the UMN MRSEC program under Award Number DMR-1420013. Partial funding for
513
this work was provided by the National Science Foundation (DMR-1609459 and DMR-
514
1707578). The authors thank Prof. Philippe Bühlmann for access to impedance spectroscopy
515
equipment.
516 517
REFERENCES
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Synopsis Synergistic drug combinations of diphenhydramine with ibuprofen or naproxen formed protic ionic liquids (PIL). Loading PIL into a mesoporous carrier achieved free-flowing powders with rapid drug dissolution than corresponding PIL.
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