Pharmaceutics (Oct 2022)

Unexpected Stability of a Prodrug to Enzymatic Hydrolysis within a Hydrated HPMC Matrix Tablet

  • Sarah Hanley,
  • Jonathan Brown,
  • Peter Timmins,
  • Catrin Davies,
  • Andrew Dennis

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/pharmaceutics14102222
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 14, no. 10
p. 2222

Abstract

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The uptake of alkaline phosphate present in dissolution medium into a hydrating hydroxypropyl methylcellulose matrix tablet and that its activity was retained therein was demonstrated. This presents a risk to the stability of prodrugs that are substrates of this enzyme such as phosphonooxymethyl derivative prodrugs. It was found that fostemsavir, a phosphonooxymethyl derivative prodrug being developed for the treatment of HIV-1 infection, was unexpectedly resistant to hydrolysis within a hydrated HPMC matrix when subjected to drug release testing in media containing alkaline phosphatase. Studies indicated that this was not due to microenvironmental pH effects, osmolality effects or effective phosphate concentration effects associated with the presence of the prodrug. That the prodrug and not its parent could affect enzyme activity in a concentration dependent manner, and that another phosphate ester prodrug fosphenytoin did not inhibit alkaline phosphatase activity within a hydrated HPMC matrix suggested that the unexpected stability of the HIV-1 therapy prodrug may be associated with the ability of the phosphate group-containing compound itself to inhibit the enzyme at the concentrations it exists at in the hydrated dosage form and so enables the development of the compound in this type of dosage form.

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