Water-insoluble drug particle process

Drug – bio-affecting and body treating compositions – Preparations characterized by special physical form – Particulate form

Reexamination Certificate

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C264S005000, C424S400000

Reexamination Certificate

active

06682761

ABSTRACT:

BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
The present invention relates to an improved process for the preparation of small particles containing a poorly water soluble drug, and in particular to an improved process for the preparation of small particles containing a poorly water soluble drug as a dispersion in an aqueous carrier and as dried small particles containing a poorly water soluble drug.
There is a critical need in the pharmaceutical and other biological based industries to formulate industrially useful water-insoluble or poorly water soluble substances into formulations for oral, injectable, inhalation, ophthalmic, and other routes of delivery. Industrially useful water insoluble or poorly water soluble substances include water insoluble or poorly water soluble biologically useful compounds, imaging agents, pharmaceutically useful compounds and in particular water insoluble and poorly water soluble drugs for human and veterinary medicine.
Microparticles of water insoluble or poorly soluble substances are small particles having diameters of from nanometers to micrometers and refer to solid particles of irregular, non-spherical or spherical shapes. When the insoluble and poorly soluble substances are therapeutically and diagnostically useful substances, formulations containing them as microparticles or small particles provide some specific advantages over unformulated non-micronized drug particles. These advantages include improved oral bioavailability of drugs that are poorly absorbed from the GI tract, development of injectable formulations that are currently available only in oral dosage form, less toxic injectable formulations that are currently prepared with organic solvents, sustained release of intramuscular injectable drugs that are currently administered through daily injection or constant infusion, preparation of inhaled, ophthalmic formulation of drugs that otherwise could not be formulated for nasal or ocular use, as well as other advantages.
Current technology for delivering insoluble drugs as described in U.S. Pat. Nos. 5,091,188; 5,091,187 and 4,725,442 focuses on (a) either coating small drug particles with surface active substances that are natural or synthetic phospholipids or (b) dissolving the drug in a suitable lipophilic carrier and forming an emulsion stabilized with surface active substances that are natural or semisynthetic phospholipids. One of the characteristics of these formulations is that certain drug particles in suspension tend to grow over time because of the dissolution and reprecipitation phenomenon known as the “Oswald ripening”.
U.S. Pat. No. 5,145,684 discloses methods for preparation and dispersions of particles consisting of crystalline drug substance having a surface modifier or surface active substance adsorbed to maintain an effective average particle size of less than about 400 nm. However, the method requires a milling step that can result in impurities being added to the formulation from fractured milling media.
U.S. Pat. Nos. 5,470,583 and 5,336,507 disclose methods for preparation of nanoparticles using a charged phospholipid as a cloud point modifier.
U.S. Pat. No. 5,302,401 discloses compositions and methods for forming nanoparticles with a surface modifier and a cryoprotectant adsorbed thereon.
International Patent Application WO 99/39700 describes the preparation of submicron nanoparticles from a pharmacologically active principle and a composite material consisting of at least one lipidic substance and at least one amphiphilic substance using high pressure homogenization to form a microemulsion of the composite material at a temperature higher than the melting temperature of at least one of the materials forming the composite and in the presence of one or more aqueous surfactants as surface active substances and then cooling the microemulsion to form a dispersion of solid particles.
U.S. Pat. No. 5,785,976 discloses a heated aqueous emulsification and cooling process for the preparation of solid lipid particles. In that process a solid lipid or bioactive agent or a mixture of solid lipids or bioactive agents is melted and stabilizers, i.e., surface active substances, are added either to the lipid or bioactive agent and to the aqueous phase or to the aqueous phase only. The aqueous phase is heated to the temperature of the melt before mixing and may contain stabilizers, isotonicity agents, buffering substances, cryoprotectants and/or preservatives. The molten lipid compounds and the bioactive agents can be emulsified in the aqueous phase by high-pressure homogenization. The homogenized dispersion is then allowed to cool until solid particles are formed by recrystallization of the dispersed agents. Drugs or other bioactive substances to be incorporated into the particles may be melted together with the lipids or may be dissolved, solubilized or dispersed in the lipid melt before an emulsification by homogenization step.
U.S. Pat. No. 5,922,355 discloses a method for preparing submicron size microparticles by particle size reduction methods in which a solid material is reduced in size over a period of time while continuously below the melting point of the material or by precipitation while the particles are stabilized with phospholipids as surface active substances in combination with other surface modifiers to control growth of particle size and enhance storage stability. The use of one or more surface modifiers in addition to a phospholipid provides volume weighted mean particle size values that are much smaller than what can be achieved using phospholipid alone without the use of an additional surface active substance (surfactant) with the same energy input while providing compositions resistant to particle size growth on storage. The phospholipid and the surfactant are both present at the time of particle size reduction.
In one aspect while it is advantageous in very many cases to use particulate pharmaceutical formulations wherein particle sizes are stabilized by combinations of phospholipids and surface modifiers according to U.S. Pat. No. 5,922,355, it is sometimes desirable to produce pharmaceutical formulations or pre-formulations which are stabilized by biocompatible phospholipids without the use of additional surface active substances. This can be desirable, for example, when there is a subsequent need to modify the composition of a particle-containing formulation in a step following the formation of the particles such as by the addition of one or more additional ingredients that are not compatible with additional surface modifiers shown to be beneficial in U.S. Pat. No. 5,922,355, the disclosure of which is hereby incorporated by reference. In one aspect it is therefore desirable to produce drug particles stabilized by one or more phospholipids in the absence of additional surface modifiers but which exhibit enhanced stability toward particle growth and which maintain sub-micron and micron size particles on subsequent storage as suspension or solid dosage form.
In another aspect, particle size reduction methods such as those disclosed in U.S. Pat. No. 5,922,355 in which particles of a material are reduced in size in the presence of phospholipid and another surface active substance while the material is maintained in the solid phase require processing for a certain length of time to achieve a desired particle size. The time is directly related to the number of homogenization volume passes or turnovers performed on a volume of a suspension of particles in a size reduction process. It is desirable to further reduce that length of time by providing an improved process that can decrease the overall number of turnovers to achieve a desired particle size.
Fenofibrate or 2-[4-(4-chlorobenzoyl)phenoxy]-2-methyl-propanoic acid 1-methylethyl ester is an example of a poorly water soluble compound. It is a benzophenone containing a para-chlorophenyl group and a para-isopropyloxycarbonylisopropoxyphenyl group, both of which are substantially hydrophobic groups. Fenofibrate exhibits a melting point reported to be in the rang

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