- A slow cooling rate of indomethacin melt spatially confined in microcontainers increases the physical stability of the amorphous drug without influencing its biorelevant dissolution behaviour.
A slow cooling rate of indomethacin melt spatially confined in microcontainers increases the physical stability of the amorphous drug without influencing its biorelevant dissolution behaviour.
Amorphous indomethacin was prepared by melting the ฮณ-form of indomethacin, spatially confined within microcontainers (inner diameter of 223ย ฮผm), followed by cooling of the melt at a rate of 14, 23 or 36ย K/min. The physical stability of the amorphous indomethacin within microcontainers was investigated using Raman microscopy. Furthermore, the dissolution behaviour of confined amorphous indomethacin was evaluated in biorelevant intestinal media at pH 6.5. After 30ย days of storage, 10.3โยฑโ1.2ย % of the amorphous indomethacin cooled at 14ย K/min and confined within microcontainers was found to be crystalline. When the melt of indomethacin was cooled at 23 or 36ย K/min, 20.7โยฑโ1.5 and 31.0โยฑโ2.6ย % of the indomethacin were found to be crystalline after storage for 30ย days. Scanning electron microscopy showed a smooth surface of amorphous indomethacin within the microcontainers when cooling the melt at 14ย K/min, whereas cracks and an uneven surface were observed when cooling at rates of 23 and 36ย K/min. The uneven surface is hypothesised to be the main reason for the lower physical stability, as the cracks could act as nucleation sites for crystal growth. The rate of cooling was not seen to have any effect on the dissolution of amorphous indomethacin from the microcontainers.