Investigation of aerosol jet printing for the preparation of solid dosage forms

Alice J. Turner*, Elke Prasad, Alastair J. Florence, Gavin W. Halbert

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

Oral drug delivery remains the preferred method of drug administration but due to poor solubility many active pharmaceutical ingredients (APIs) are ill suited to this. A number of methods to improve solubility of poorly soluble Biopharmaceutical Classification System (BCS) Class II drugs already exist but there is a lack of scalable, flexible methods. As such the current study applies the innovative technique of aerosol jet printing to increase the dissolution capabilities of a Class II drug in a manner which permits flexibility to allow dosage form tailoring. Aerosol jet printing provided a high degree of control allowing effective scaling, by size and layering, and control over drug distribution. Aerosol jet printing of pure active pharmaceutical ingredient (fenofibrate) resulted in crystalline material but as polymer excipient content was increased, morphological changes occurred and a fully amorphous product was generated on inclusion of 75 % (w/w solute) polymer content or above. This amorphous product has been found to exhibit a 10-fold increase in drug dissolution relative to comparable physical mixtures. In conclusion, aerosol jet printing is a novel and effective, scalable method providing improved dissolution coupled with high spatial precision and warrants further investigation.
Original languageEnglish
Article number125288
Number of pages12
JournalInternational Journal of Pharmaceutics
Volume671
Early online date27 Jan 2025
DOIs
Publication statusE-pub ahead of print - 27 Jan 2025

Keywords

  • aerosol jet printing
  • solubility
  • additive manufacturing
  • personalised medicine
  • solid dispersion
  • amorphous
  • scalability

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