Polymorphism BE [Dissolution / BCS / IVIVC]

posted by Aceto81 – Belgium, 2011-11-23 15:09 (4534 d 22:43 ago) – Posting: # 7700
Views: 3,837

Hi,

this is the case:
The oral tablet used in a succesfull bioequivalence study (companion animals) contained an active substance which was a mixture of 2 polymorphs: polymorph B for approximately 80% and polymorph A for approximately 20%. It is furter demonstrated for the active substance that in time the polymorph A converts into polymorph B (after 3 years 60-70% conversion). Further, it seems that polymorph A is more soluble than polymorph B:
Polymorph A: 1gm soluble in 30 ml water
Polymorph B: 1gm soluble in 50 ml water
Relevance of this solubility difference with regard to bioavailability in companion animals ??

We need to demonstrate that each future batch of tablets will still be within the bioequivalence range of earlier demonstrated results and therefore it is asked to demonstrate that the bioavailability of both polymorphs is the same (not depending on the ratio of polymorphs).

Is the following approach valid and relevant ?
We are able to obtain the polymorphic form B in pure form. We can perform comparative in-vitro dissolution studies (3 media with different pH) between active substance polymorph B and active substance wich is mixture of polymorph B/A (80:20). If dissolution profiles are identical we have demonstrated equal bioavailability for the possible range of polymorph ratios (going from 80% polymorph B to 100% polymorph B).

Sounds valid, or other ideas?:confused:

Ace

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