Yin Shawn X, Franchini Miriam, Chen Jinling, Hsieh Alice, Jen Sandy, Lee Tu, Hussain Munir, Smith Ronald
Pharmaceutical Research Institute, Bristol-Myers Squibb Company, One Squibb Drive, P.O. Box 191, New Brunswick, NJ 08903, USA.
J Pharm Sci. 2005 Jul;94(7):1598-607. doi: 10.1002/jps.20366.
Spray drying drug with excipients is usually associated with the preparation of microcrystalline or amorphous drug in order to improve bioavailability. It was found that BMS-347070, when spray-dried with Pluronic F127 from acetone or methylene chloride, was dispersed as nanosized crystalline drug within the water-soluble Pluronic matrix. The reduction in drug particle/crystallite size, coupled with wetting by the Pluronic, resulted in a fast-onset formulation with bioavailability comparable to that of a solubilized and a NanoCrystal formulation. For this system, it is theorized that the polyethylene oxide segments of Pluronic crystallize and that the polypropylene oxide segments remain amorphous, providing a size-restricted domain in which the COX-2 drug crystallizes. This results in improved bioavailability while limiting the potential risk of conversion of an amorphous drug to its crystalline state.