42 research outputs found
Formation and physicochemical properties of crystalline and amorphous salts with different stoichiometries formed between ciprofloxacin and succinic acid
YesMulti-ionizable compounds, such as dicarboxylic
acids, offer the possibility of forming salts of drugs with
multiple stoichiometries. Attempts to crystallize ciprofloxacin,
a poorly water-soluble, amphoteric molecule with succinic acid
(S) resulted in isolation of ciprofloxacin hemisuccinate (1:1)
trihydrate (CHS-I) and ciprofloxacin succinate (2:1) tetrahydrate
(CS-I). Anhydrous ciprofloxacin hemisuccinate (CHS-II)
and anhydrous ciprofloxacin succinate (CS-II) were also
obtained. It was also possible to obtain stoichiometrically
equivalent amorphous salt forms, CHS-III and CS-III, by spray
drying and milling, respectively, of the drug and acid. Anhydrous CHS and CS had melting points at ∼215 and ∼228 °C, while
the glass transition temperatures of CHS-III and CS-III were ∼101 and ∼79 °C, respectively. Dynamic solubility studies revealed
the metastable nature of CS-I in aqueous media, resulting in a transformation of CS-I to a mix of CHS-I and ciprofloxacin 1:3.7
hydrate, consistent with the phase diagram. CS-III was observed to dissolve noncongruently leading to high and sustainable drug
solution concentrations in water at 25 and 37 °C, with the ciprofloxacin concentration of 58.8 ± 1.18 mg/mL after 1 h of the
experiment at 37 °C. This work shows that crystalline salts with multiple stoichiometries and amorphous salts have diverse
pharmaceutically relevant properties, including molecular, solid state, and solubility characteristics.Solid State Pharmaceutical Cluster (SSPC), supported by Science Foundation Ireland under grant number 07/SRC/ B1158