Equilibrium solubility measurement of ionizable drugs-consensus recommendations for improving data quality

Publication date

2019-10-29T10:56:46Z

2019-10-29T10:56:46Z

2016-06-29

2019-10-29T10:56:47Z

Abstract

This commentary addresses data quality in equilibrium solubility measurement in aqueous solution. Broadly discussed is the 'gold standard' shake-flask (SF) method used to measure equilibrium solubility of ionizable drug-like molecules as a function of pH. Many factors affecting the quality of the measurement are recognized. Case studies illustrating the analysis of both solution and solid state aspects of solubility measurement are presented. Coverage includes drug aggregation in solution (sub-micellar, micellar, complexation), use of mass spectrometry to assess aggregation in saturated solutions, solid state characterization (salts, polymorphs, cocrystals, polymorph creation by potentiometric method), solubility type (water, buffer, intrinsic), temperature, ionic strength, pH measurement, buffer issues, critical knowledge of the pKa, equilibration time (stirring and sedimentation), separating solid from saturated solution, solution handling and adsorption to untreated surfaces, solubility units, and tabulation/graphic presentation of reported data. The goal is to present cohesive recommendations that could lead to better assay design, to result in improved quality of measurements, and to impart a deeper understanding of the underlying solution chemistry in suspensions of drug solids. © 2016 International Association of Physical Chemists.

Document Type

Article


Published version

Language

English

Subjects and keywords

Sals; Solubilitat; Salts; Solubility

Publisher

IAPC Publishing

Related items

Reproducció del document publicat a: https://doi.org/10.5599/admet.4.2.292

ADMET & DMPK, 2016, vol. 4, num. 2, p. 117-178

https://doi.org/10.5599/admet.4.2.292

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Rights

cc-by (c) Avdeef, Alex et al., 2016

http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/es

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