Physiological parameters of the gastrointestinal fluid impact the dissolution behavior of the BCS class IIa drug valsartan.
Rania HamedPublished in: Pharmaceutical development and technology (2019)
The objective of this study was to investigate the effect of the physiological parameters (pH, buffer capacity, and ionic strength) of the gastrointestinal (GI) fluid on the dissolution behavior of the class II weakly acidic (BCS class IIa) drug valsartan. A series of in vitro dissolution studies was carried out on Diovan® immediate release tablets using media that cover the physiological range of pH (1.2-7.8), buffer capacity (0-0.047 M/ΔpH), and ionic strength (0-0.4 mol/L) of the GI fluid during fasted and fed states using the conventional USP II apparatus. Valsartan exhibited pH- and buffer capacity-dependent dissolution behavior, where valsartan release was slow and incomplete in media simulating gastric fluid with low pH, and fast and complete in media simulating intestinal fluid with high pH. In addition, the rate of valsartan release increased with increasing the buffer capacity of the dissolution medium. In water and NaCl solutions, valsartan release was incomplete and the dissolution profiles were similar regardless of the ionic strength of the medium, indicating an ionic strength-independent dissolution behavior. These results highlight the significant effect of the physiological parameters of the GI fluid on the dissolution behavior of BCS class IIa drugs.
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