3D printed spherical mini-tablets: geometry versus composition effects in controlling dissolution from personalised solid dosage forms

Sejad Ayyoubi, Jose R. Cerda, Raquel Fernández-García, Peter Knief, Aikaterini Lalatsa, Anne Marie Healy, Dolores R. Serrano*

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

66 Citations (Scopus)
126 Downloads (Pure)

Abstract

Oral dosage forms are by far the most common prescription and over-the-counter pharmaceutical dosage forms used worldwide. However, many patients suffer from adverse effects caused by their use of "one-size fits all" mass produced commercially available solid dosage forms, whereby they do not receive dedicated medication or dosage adjusted to their specific needs. The development of 3D printing paves the way for personalised medicine. This work focuses on personalised therapies for hypertensive patients using nifedipine as the model drug. 3D printed full solid and channelled spherical mini-tablets with enhanced surface area (1.6-fold higher) were printed using modified PVA commercial filaments loaded by passive diffusion (PD), and Kollidon VA64 (KVA) and ethylcellulose (EC) based filaments prepared by hot-melt extrusion (HME). Drug loading ranged from 3.7% to 60% based on the employed technique, with a 13-fold higher drug loading achieved with the HME compared to PD. Composition was found to have a more significant impact on drug dissolution than geometry and surface area. Both KVA and EC-based formulations exhibited a biphasic zero-order drug-release profile. Physicochemical characterization revealed that nifedipine was in the amorphous form in the KVA-based end-products which led to a greater dissolution control over a 24 h period compared to the EC-based formulations that exhibited low levels of crystallinity by PXRD. The proposed 3D printed spherical mini-tablets provide a versatile technology for personalised solid dosage forms with high drug loading and dissolution control, easily adaptable to patient and disease needs.

Original languageEnglish
Article number120336
JournalInternational Journal of Pharmaceutics
Volume597
Early online date17 Feb 2021
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 15 Mar 2021

Funding

AM Healy acknowledges Science Foundation Ireland grants co-funded under the European Regional Development Fund (SFI/12/RC/2275 and SFI/12/RC/2275_P2). Sejad Ayyoubi was supported with an Erasmus + grant to undertake a placement at UCM, Madrid, Spain. This study was also partially supported by the Complutense University of Madrid (910939 Formulación y biodisponibilidad de nuevos medicamentos).

Keywords

  • 3D printing
  • fused deposition modelling (FDM)
  • hot-melt extrusion (HME)
  • mini-tablets
  • nifedipine

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