Process for the preparation of nefazodone hydrochloride

Organic compounds -- part of the class 532-570 series – Organic compounds – Nitrogen attached directly or indirectly to the purine ring...

Reexamination Certificate

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C544S393000

Reexamination Certificate

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06596866

ABSTRACT:

FIELD OF THE INVENTION
This invention relates to processes for the preparation of Nefazodone Hydrochloride.
BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
Nefazodone[2-[3-[4-(3-Chlorophenyl)-1-piperazinyl]propyl]-5-ethyl-2,4-dihydro-4-(2-phenoxyethyl)-3H-1,2,4-triazol-3-one; 2-[3-[4-(3-chlorophenyl)-1-piperazinyl]-propyl]-5-ethyl-4-(2-phenoxyethyl)-2H-1,2,4-triazol-3(4H)-one] bears the following structural formula:
One of the forms of Nefazodone marketed is the hydrochloride form.
Canadian Letter Patent 1,198,436 and its corresponding U.S. Pat. No. 4,338,317 disclose a process for the manufacture of Nefazodone free base and Nefazodone hydrochloride. The above patents purport to claim a process involving the reaction of 2-piperazinylalkyltriazolone with suitable phenoxyalkylhalide to form Nefazodone free base. The Nefazodone free base is then converted to Nefazodone hydrochloride by using hydrogen chloride.
Canadian Patent 1,233,826 disclosed a purported improved process in which the Nefazodone free base is produced by reacting a phenoxyalkylcarbamate with an N-substituted hydrazide of a carboxylic acid.
U.S. Pat. No. 5,900,485 describes another process for preparing Nefazodone from semicarbazide dihydrochloride 3 and triethyl orthopropionate in the presence of hydrochloride.
Processes described in the Canadian Letter Patent 1,198,436, U.S. Pat. No. 4,338,317 and Canadian Patent 1,233,826 for the preparation of Nefazodone hydrochloride involve the preparation of Nefazodone free base first and then the conversion of it to Nefazodone hydrochloride.
The process of reacting an amine base with hydrogen chloride is a standard textbook reaction in most cases. The reaction of substituted piperazines with hydrogen chloride is not as simple as it seems however. There are two problems.
The first problem is that the product of this reaction often crystallizes in the form of a solvate or hydrate, i.e. the solid hydrochloride salt contains water (or some other solvent). An example of this is seen at page 20, lines 14-18 of Canadian Letters Patent 1,198,436. The hydrate of a hydrochloride salt does not have the same chemical and physical properties as the solvent free form. Further the process of reacting nefazodone with hydrogen chloride does not always produce a single form such as the anhydrous monohydrochloride salt of nefazodone.
The second problem is that nefazodone is an arylpiperazine, which means that it has a second basic site. Reacting the free base of an arylpiperazine with hydrogen chloride must be carried out under strict control of conditions if the monohydrochloride salt is to be the only result. Example 2(a) at page 20, lines 12-17 of Canadian Letters Patent 1,198,436 teaches the preparation of the HCl salt of nefazodone (as a hydrate) by “acidifying a solution of the free base in ethanol with ethanolic hydrogen chloride, and crystallization to afford hydrate . . . ”. Clearly, therefore the formation of an HCl salt is not without complications which must be allowed for to arrive at the final desired product.
The experimental evidence in example 2 of the Patent shows the analysis for a mono-hydrochloride but does not specify the means by which it was made or the amount of HCl used. Was it formed cleanly, or was the final pure salt only reached by extensive purification of a mixture of HCl salts? In fact the starting free base is noted as having been formed in 94% yield, but when the mono-hydrochloride is formed the yield is given as only 30.7%. This large loss requires the need to separate out other formed salts and teaches that the claimed mono-hydrochloride is not the only product formed on adding HCl in ethanol to the free base.
The HCl salt finally isolated is itself a hydrate, implying also the difficulty attending to the formation of solvates of the salt in the process. The production of the hydrate would depend on the conditions used in the reactions including the solvent. At the end of example 2 is a notation that a non-hydrated sample can be formed “according to the above process”. The “above process” was said to give a hydrate, and so something else undisclosed must have been done to yield “a sample” fortuitously non-hydrated, and the yield here is also not stated. Finally, it is suspicious that all the spectral detail to characterize the hydrochloride was taken on the hydrated sample even though only the non-hydrated form was claimed.
Similar descriptions of procedures for preparing HCl salts appear at page 21, lines 21-23; page 22, lines 20-22; page 23, lines 17-19; and page 29, lines 18-21.
Thus the reaction of nefazodone and hydrogen chloride is not a simple reaction and depending upon the conditions, solvents (vehicle in which the reaction proceeds), order of addition of reactants to the solvent and amounts of reactants, these criteria will determine the form of Nefazodone produced.
U.S. Pat. No. 5,900,485 describes a process which deals with a direct one-pot conversion of semicarbazide dihydrochloride 3 to Nefazodone hydrochloride. This process suffers from lower yield with 45%. The purity of the product obtained was only 95% and required further purification to obtain pharmaceutically acceptable samples.
It is therefore an object of the invention to provide an improved and higher yielding process for the manufacture of Nefazodone hydrochloride.
It is a further object of the invention to provide a process for the manufacture of Nefazodone hydrochloride directly from the semicarbazide dihydrochloride.
Further and other objects of the invention will become apparent to those skilled in the art when considering the following summary of the invention and the more detailed description of the preferred embodiments and examples described herein.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
The present invention provides a novel and higher yielding and cost-effective process for the manufacture of Nefazodone hydrochloride. Unexpectedly, it has been found that the yield can be dramatically enhanced through the use of an additive or catalyst, for example trimethylsilyl chloride, which promotes the formation of the iminoester intermediate. The iminoester hydrochloride is then converted directly to Nefazodone hydrochloride in situ through cyclization in the presence of hydrochloride and an organic solvent.
Therefore according to one aspect of the invention there is provided a process comprising reacting semicarbazide dihydrochloride (i.e. Formula 3 below) with triethylorthopropionate using, for example, trimethysilylchloride and hydrochloric acid in alcohol to convert the semicarbazide dihydrochloride directly into Nefazodone Hydrochloride (i.e. Formula 4 below). Purification of the resulting Nefazodone Hydrochloride affords pure Nefazodone Hydrochloride.
According to yet another aspect of the invention there is provided a process for the preparation of Nefazodone Hydrochloride comprising reacting semicarbazide dihydrochloride with triethylorthopropionate using trimethylsilylchloride and hydrochloric acid to convert the semicarbazide dihydrochloride (i.e. Formula 3 below) into Nefazodone Hydrochloride (i.e. Formula 4 below) directly. Purification of crude Nefazodone Hydrochloride affords pure Nefazodone Hydrochloride.
According to yet another aspect of the invention there is provided a process for the preparation of Nefazodone Hydrochloride comprising:
(i) adding Semicarbazide (i.e. Formula 2 below) (445 g, 1.03 mol) in methanol (2000 mL) to hydrochloric acid (342 g, 2.58 eq) in isopropanol (27.5% w/w solution);
(ii) heating the mixture to reflux for 2.5 to 3.0 hours and subsequently cooling it to room temperature;
(iii) filtering the reaction mixture and washing the solid with methanol (500 mL) and subsequently drying same under vacuum to afford 429 g (85% molar) of Semicarbazide Dihydrochloride (i.e. Formula 3 below);
(iv) adding trimethylsilyl chloride (23.9 g, 0.22 mol) slowly to a suspension of Semicarbazide Dihydrochloride (i.e. Formula 3 below) (101 g, 0.20 mol) in ethanol (400 mL), followed by triethyl orthopropionate (141 g, 0.80 mol) and stirrin

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