Chemical Industry and Chemical Engineering Quarterly (Mar 2008)

THE STUDY ON THE EFFECT OF FORMULATION VARIABLES ON IN VITRO FLOATING TIME AND THE RELEASE PROPERTIES OF A FLOATING DRUG DELIVERY SYSTEM BY A STATISTICAL OPTIMIZATION TECHNIQUE

  • C. NARENDRA,
  • M. S. SRINATH,
  • A. MOIN

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 14, no. 1
pp. 17 – 26

Abstract

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The present investigation concerns the evaluation of the effect of formulation variables on in vitro floating time and the release properties in developing a floating drug delivery system (FDDS) containing a highly water soluble drug metoprolol tartrate (MT) in the presence of a gas generating agent. A 32 full factorial design was employed in formulating the FDDS containing hydroxyl propylmethylcellulose (HPMC K4M) and sodium carboxymethylcellulose (NaCMC) as swellable polymers. Drug-to-polymer ratio and polymer-to-polymer ratio were included as independent variables. The main effect and the interaction terms were quantitatively evaluated by a quadratic model to predict formulations with the floating time desired, and the release properties. It was found that only drug-to-polymer ratio and its quadratic term were found to be significantly affective for all the response variables. Non-Fickian transport was confirmed as a release mechanism from the optimized formulations. The desirability function was used to optimize the response variables, each having a different target, and the observed responses were highly agreed with experimental values. The results demonstrate the feasibility of the model in the development of FDDS containing a highly water-soluble drug MT.

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