RESUMEN
Two decades ago, postmarket discovery of a second crystal form of ritonavir with lower solubility had major implications for drug manufacturers and patients. Since then, ritonavir has been reformulated via the hot-melt-extrusion process in an amorphous form. Here, quantitative low- and mid-frequency Raman spectroscopy methods were developed to characterize polymorphs, form I and form II, in commercial ritonavir 100 mg oral tablets as an alternate analysis approach compared to X-ray powder diffraction (XRPD). Crystallization in three lots of ritonavir products obtained from four separate manufacturers was assessed after storage under accelerated conditions at 40 °C and 75% relative humidity (RH). Results were compared with quantitative XRPD methods developed and validated according to ICH Q2 (R1) guidelines. In a four-week open-dish study, form I crystallization occurred in two of the four products and form II crystallization was detected in another ritonavir product. The limits of detection for XRPD, low-frequency Raman (LFR), and mid-frequency Raman (MFR) were determined to be 0.7, 0.8, and 0.5% for form I and 0.6, 0.6, and 1% for form II, respectively. Root-mean-squared-error of predictions were 0.6-1.0 and 0.6-2.5% for LFR- and MFR-based partial least-squares models. Further, ritonavir polymorphs could also be identified and detected directly from ritonavir tablets using transmission LFR. In summary, LFR was applied for the assessment of polymorphism in real-world samples. While providing analytical performance similar to conventional techniques, LFR reduced the single measurement time from 66 min (XRPD) to 10 s (LFR) without the need for tedious sample preparation procedures.
Asunto(s)
Ritonavir , Espectrometría Raman , Humanos , Ritonavir/química , Espectrometría Raman/métodos , Difracción de Rayos X , Solubilidad , Cristalización , PolvosRESUMEN
Cervical dysplasia induced by the human papilloma virus unpredictably progresses to cervical cancer. Therapeutic options are invasive and affect the patient's quality of life. SHetA2 has demonstrated therapeutic efficacy against human and murine human papilloma virus-induced tumors, but its oral bioavailability is <1%. An optimized vaginal suppository formulation can deliver SHetA2 in sufficient doses to prevent cervical dysplasia. The quality by design approach was employed to optimize the suppository formulation consisting of cocoa butter as base with 5% Kolliphor and 40% SHetA2. The suppository had a content uniformity of 105.44 ± 0.42%, melted in <8 min, and had a complete release of SHetA2 in water. Administration of the suppository to mice-achieved cervix concentrations that were significantly higher than the SHetA2 therapeutic concentration, with the maximum concentration (Cmax-cervix = 336.78 µg/g) being more than 100-fold the therapeutic SHetA2 concentration. Furthermore, the levels of cyclin D1 protein decreased 9-fold indicating a correlation of drug concentrations with the pharmacodynamic endpoint. These proof-of-concept studies suggest that the SHetA2 optimized vaginal suppository formulation may have a potential use in the prevention of cervical dysplasia, but detailed efficacy studies are required to confirm this assumption.