What is it about?
The amorphous state has long been identified as a potential technology to bring poorly soluble drug molecules to the market but it comes with an inherent high risk of crystallisation over the shelf life of a medicine. This paper outlines a new technique that can be used to measure how easily a molecule crystallises from the amorphous solid state and hence could predict the amorphous stability.
Featured Image
Why is it important?
We found that terahertz spectroscopy can measure the molecular mobility that governs crystallisation in a much more robust fashion compared to the commonly used techniques. Our work also highlighted that it is not sufficient to keep an amorphous material at a temperature slightly below the glass transition temperature but that a much lower temperature is needed for this purpose (about 2/3 of the glass transition temperature in Kelvins).
Read the Original
This page is a summary of: Predicting Crystallization of Amorphous Drugs with Terahertz Spectroscopy, Molecular Pharmaceutics, August 2015, American Chemical Society (ACS),
DOI: 10.1021/acs.molpharmaceut.5b00330.
You can read the full text:
Resources
Contributors
The following have contributed to this page