Scaled-Up Production and Tableting of Grindable Electrospun Fibers Containing a Protein-Type Drug.
Panna VassEdit HirschRita KócziánBalázs DémuthAttila FarkasCsaba FehérEdina SzabóÁron NémethSune K AndersenTamás VighGeert VerreckIstván CsontosGyörgy MarosiZsombor K NagyPublished in: Pharmaceutics (2019)
The aims of this work were to develop a processable, electrospun formulation of a model biopharmaceutical drug, β-galactosidase, and to demonstrate that higher production rates of biopharmaceutical-containing fibers can be achieved by using high-speed electrospinning compared to traditional electrospinning techniques. An aqueous solution of 7.6 w/w% polyvinyl alcohol, 0.6 w/w% polyethylene oxide, 9.9 w/w% mannitol, and 5.4 w/w% β-galactosidase was successfully electrospun with a 30 mL/h feeding rate, which is about 30 times higher than the feeding rate usually attained with single-needle electrospinning. According to X-ray diffraction measurements, polyvinyl alcohol, polyethylene oxide, and β-galactosidase were in an amorphous state in the fibers, whereas mannitol was crystalline (δ-polymorph). The presence of crystalline mannitol and the low water content enabled appropriate grinding of the fibrous sample without secondary drying. The ground powder was mixed with excipients commonly used during the preparation of pharmaceutical tablets and was successfully compressed into tablets. β-galactosidase remained stable during each of the processing steps (electrospinning, grinding, and tableting) and after one year of storage at room temperature in the tablets. The obtained results demonstrate that high-speed electrospinning is a viable alternative to traditional biopharmaceutical drying methods, especially for heat sensitive molecules, and tablet formulation is achievable from the electrospun material prepared this way.
Keyphrases
- tissue engineering
- high speed
- room temperature
- atomic force microscopy
- high resolution
- ionic liquid
- aqueous solution
- drug delivery
- wound healing
- emergency department
- lactic acid
- magnetic resonance
- magnetic resonance imaging
- alcohol consumption
- ultrasound guided
- mass spectrometry
- protein protein
- drug induced
- dual energy
- liquid chromatography
- crystal structure
- oxide nanoparticles