Title: Pharmaceutical Dosage Forms
1Pharmaceutical Dosage Forms
- Presented
- By
- Prof. Dr. Sanaa A. El-Gizawy
2Pharmaceutics
- Pharmaceutics is the science of dosage form
design. - There are many chemicals with known
pharmacological properties but a raw chemical is
of no use to a patient. - Pharmaceutics deals with the formulation of a
pure drug substance into a dosage form.
3Active Drug Substance
- (Active pharmaceutical ingredient - API)
- Chemical compound with pharmacological (or other
direct effect ) intended for use in diagnosis,
treatment or prophylaxis of diseases. - International non-proprietary names (INN, generic
names)
4Direct clinical use of the active drug substances
as they are is rare due to a number of good
reasons
- API handling can be difficult or impossible
(e.g., low mg and ?g doses) - Accurate drug dosing can be difficult or
impossible - API administration can be impractical, unfeasible
or not according to the therapeutic aims - Some API can benefit from reducing the exposure
to the environmental factors (light, moisture),
or they need to be chemically stabilised due to
the inherent chemical instability
5Direct clinical use of the active drug substances
as they are is rare due to a number of good
reasons
- API can be degraded at the site of administration
(e.g., low pH in stomach) - API may cause local irritations or injury when
they are present at high concentrations at the
site of administration - API can have unpleasant organoleptic qualities
(taste, smell compliance!) - Administration of active substance would mean to
have no chance for modification (improvement) of
its PK profile
6From drug substance to pharmaceutical preparation
- Besides the choice of the active drug substance,
you need to also make a responsible decision
regarding the route of administration and the
DOSAGE FORM (drug delivery system) wrong choice
can cause failure of therapy - You should also be able to handle and administer
the drug properly or advise the patient about it
wrong use can cause failure of therapy
7Excipients
- Excipients (inactive pharmaceutical ingredients)
- Its selection depends on technological,
biopharmaceutical and/or stability reasons. - Diluents/fillers, binders, lubricants, coatings,
preservatives, colorants and flavouring agents
8Pharmaceutical dosage form
- Pharmaceutical dosage form
- Determines the physical form of the final
pharmaceutical preparation - Is a drug delivery system which is formed by
technological processing (drug formulation) - Must reflect therapeutic intentions, route of
administrations, dosing etc.
9Pharmaceutical preparation (PP)
- Pharmaceutical preparation (PP)
- particular pharmaceutical product containing
active and inactive pharmaceutical ingredients
formulated into the particular dosage form. - Packed and labelled appropriately
- Two major types of PP according the origin
- Manufactured in large scales by pharmaceutical
industry (original and generic preparations) - Compounded individually in compounding pharmacies
101- Pharmaceutical preparations manufactured by
pharmaceutical industry
- 1.1- Original pharmaceutical preparations
- undergo full and very extensive pharmacological/
toxicological and pharmaceutical pre-clinical and
clinical development and evaluation - particularly important is the proof of
effectiveness and safety
111.2- Generic pharmaceutical preparations
(authorised copies of original preparations)
- - Can be released after the expiration of the
patent protection of the original preparation - The approval for clinical use is easier due to
the prior experience with the original
preparation - Must be pharmaceutically equivalent same API,
dose, pharmaceutical dosage form and the same
route of administration as in original
preparation - Must be clinically bioequivalent i.e. it must be
of very close PK profile as original preparation.
PK parameters (Cmax, tmax, AUC) are within 80-125
range as compared with the original
preparation.
122- Pharmaceutical preparations compounded
individually
- These PP are compounded individually for a
particular patient according to the physician's
prescription in a pharmacy licensed for
compounding - In contrast to the past, they are used rather
rarely and mostly in specific situations - It is highly advisable that whenever the
particular suitable PP is approved and
commercially available it should be preferred
over the compounding - The major disadvantage is the lack of
standardization (it is always a single-patient
batch), unavailability of rigorous QC testing
and the appropriate clinical evaluation.
13The individually compounded PP can be a justified
choice when
- The drug in a particular dosage form is not
commercially available on the market - The extraordinary low or high dose is needed
(young children, elderly people, special
situations e.g., intoxications). In this case
right dosage strength need not be readily
commercially available for every patient - The patient suffers from the allergy on a
specific excipients (e.g., lactose a filler,
some colorizing/flavouring or antimicrobial
agents - parabens) or another drug appearing in
the PP - Patient is unable to use a PP in its commercially
available dosage form (e.g., children, elderly)
14Classification of pharmaceutical dosage forms
according to physical properties
- Gaseous dosage forms
- Liquid dosage forms
- Semisolid dosage forms
- Solid dosage forms
15Gases
- Medicinal gases, inhalation/volatile anaesthetics
(vaporised before administration by inhalation) - Aerodispersions of solid particles (e.g.,
antiasthmatic inhalations) or liquid particles
(antiasthmatic inhalations or sprays)
16Liquids
- Solutions one homogenous phase, prepared by
dissolving one or more solutes in a solvent - Emulsions
- a dispersion system consisting of two immiscible
liquids - o/w or w/o
- cloudy appearance
- Suspensions
- A dispersion system where solid particles
(dispersed phase) are dispersed in liquid phase
(dispersion medium) - According to the size of dispersed particles (1
nm- 0,5 mm) a molecular, colloidal and coarse
dispersions can be distinguished - May require shaking before administration
- Not intended for systemic administration of drugs
with high potency
17Semisolid dosage forms1- Unshaped (without
specific physical shape)
-
- Gels -A semisolid systems in which a liquid phase
is constrained within a 3D cross-linked matrix. -
- Creams semisolid emulsion systems (o/w, w/o)
containing more than 10 of water. - o/w creams - more comfortable and cosmetically
acceptable as they are less greasy and more
easily water washable - w/o creams accommodate and release better
lipophilic API, moisturizing, Cold creams
18Semisolid dosage forms1- Unshaped (without
specific physical shape)
- Ointments semisolid dosage forms with the
oleaginous (hydrocarbon), water-soluble or
emulsifying base - Oleaginous (hydrocabon) base Petrolatum
(Vaseline white, yellow) - Water-soluble base Polyethylenglycol (PEG)-
ointment syn. macrogol ointments - Pastes semisolid dispersion system, where a
solid particles (gt 25, e.g. ZnO) are dispersed
in ointments mostly oleaginous (Petrolatum)
19Semisolid dosage forms
- 2- Shaped
- Suppositories (for rectal administration)
- different shapes
- Melting/dissolving at body temperature
- Oleaginous (cacao butter, adeps neutralis) or
aqueous (PEGs, glycerinated gelatine) - Pessaries (vaginal suppositories)
- Similar as above, PEGs or glycerinated gelatine
are often used as base.
20Solid Dosage Forms
- Unshaped (without specific shape)
- - powders for external/internal use
- Shaped
- Tablets
- Capsules
- Implantates (Sterile disks inserted surgically
into body tissues and designed to release drug(s)
over extended period of time) - Transdermal patches
- Lozenges (consists of sugar and gum to medicate
the mouth and throate)
21Classification of pharmaceutical dosage forms
according to the route of administration
- for systemic administration
- Peroral (p.o)
- Sublingual (S.L) and buccal.
- Rectal
- Parenteral
- Transdermal
- Inhalation
22Classification of pharmaceutical dosage forms
according to the route of administration
- for local administration
- Topical (on the skin or mucosa)
- Into/onto - the eye, nose, ear
- - the oral cavity
- - the vagina, rectum
- - the brochi
- - the skin
- Local parenteral (viz Parenteral above)
- Oral (local effect within GIT antacids,
adsorbents)
23Prescription Writing
- The prescription is one of the most important
therapeutic transactions between physician and
patient. - The art of prescription writing is an ancient
inheritance. - The ancients started their prescription with an
appeal to the gods for its success. - The ancient symbol, Rx, signifying the appeal,
was established centuries ago and has been
carried down to the present time.
24Prescription Writing
- To avoid undesirable and/or serious effects on
the patient, both physician and pharmacist must
render the highest of professional services. - Accurate diagnosis proper selection of
medication, dosage form and route of
administration proper size and timing of dose
precise dispensing accurate labeling and
correct packaging all must be provided.
25Parts of prescriptions
26- For Arthur H. Recipe
- Take thou
- Potassium Acetate of.............................o
ne drachm. - Of Solution of Acetate of Ammonium........three
and a half drachms. - Of Spirits of Nitrous Ether.......................
....two drachms. - Of Infusion of Buchu (a quantity sufficient) up
to four ounces......... - Signa -Mix. Let a mixture be made.
- Label -One drachm three times a day after meals.
27Parts of prescriptions
28Form of the Written Prescription
- A prescription consists of the superscription,
the inscription, the subscription, the signa, and
the name of the prescriber - 1- Superscription
- The date when the prescription order is written
the name, address and age of the patient and the
symbol Rx (an abbreviation for "recipe," the
Latin for "take")
29Form of the Written Prescription
- 2- Inscription
- The body of the prescription, containing the name
and amount or strength of each ingredient. - 3- Subscription
- The directions to the pharmacist, usually
consisting of a short sentence such as "make a
solution," "mix and place into 10 capsules," or
"dispense 10 tablets."
30Form of the Written Prescription
- 4- Signature
- From the Latin "signa," meaning "write," "make,"
or "label," this sections contains the directions
to the patient. - These should always be written in English
however, physicians continue to insert Latin
abbreviations, e.g. "1 cap t.i.d. pc," which the
pharmacist translates into English, "take one
capsule three times daily after meals." Since the
pharmacist always writes the label in English,
the use of such abbreviations or symbols should
be discouraged.
31Form of the Written Prescription
- Follow 4- Signature
- The instruction, "take as directed," is not
satisfactory and should be avoided. - The directions to the patient should include a
reminder of the intended purpose of the
medication by including such phrases as "for
pain," "for relief of headache," or "to relieve
itching"
32Form of the Written Prescription
- 5- Labeling
- When the physician wants his patient to know the
name of the drug, the box on the prescription
form marked "label" should be checked. - 6- Refills
- The physician should designate the number of
refills he wishes the patient to have.
33Proprietary vs. Non-Proprietary ("Generic")
Prescriptions
- In recent years, some hospitals and private
physicians are indicating on the prescription
their willingness or desire that the pharmacist
dispense a non-proprietary or "generic-named"
preparation instead of the trade name item
written on the prescription. Some have a box on
the prescription designated "N.P.P." In this way,
the pharmacist can use a form of the drug which
may be less expensive to the patient.
34Types of Drugs
- Legend Drugs These drugs may not be dispensed by
a pharmacist without a prescription from a
physician. - Controlled Drugs In addition to requiring a
prescription, these drugs require additional
safeguards for storage. Refills are also limited. - Over-the-Counter (OTC) Drugs These drugs do not
require a prescription.
35Controlled Substances
- Schedules of Controlled Drugs These drugs are
divided into five schedules. - Drugs can be scheduled, unscheduled, or moved
from one schedule to another as the need arises. - Schedule I
- Drugs in this schedule have a high abuse
potential (narcotic and hallucination effects).
Examples are heroin, marijuana.
36Controlled Substances
- Schedule II
- Drugs in this schedule have a high abuse
potential with severe psychic or physical
dependence liability. Included are certain
narcotic analgesics, stimulants, and depressant
drugs. Examples are opium, morphine, codeine,
hydromorphone, methadone, meperidine, oxycodone,
anileridine, cocaine, amphetamine,
methamphetamine, phenmetrazine, methylphenidate,
amobarbital, pentobarbital, secobarbital,
methaqualone, and phencyclidine.
37Controlled Substances
- Schedule III
- Drugs in this schedule have an abuse potential
less than those in Schedules I and II and include
compounds containing limited quantities of
certain narcotic analgesic drugs, and other drugs
such as barbiturates, glutethimide, methyprylon,
and chlorphentemine. Any suppository dosage form
containing amobarbital, secobarbital, or
pentobarbital is in this schedule.
38Controlled Substances
- Schedule IV
- Drugs in this schedule have an abuse potential
less than those listed in Schedule III and
include such drugs as barbital, phenobarbital,
chloral hydrate, ethchlorvynol, meprobabmate,
chlordizepoxide, diazepam, oxazepam,
chloroazepate, flurazepam, etc.
39Controlled Substances
- Schedule V
- Drugs in this schedule have an abuse potential
less than those listed in Schedule IV and consist
primarily of preparations containing limited
quantities of certain narcotic analgesic drugs
used for antitussive and antidiarrheal purposes.
40Requirements for Prescriptions Written for
Controlled Substances
- Required Information on the Prescription
- Must be dated and signed on the day it is issued.
Must have the full name and address of the
patient. - Must have the name, address, and registration
number of the physician. - May be prepared by the secretary, but must be
signed by the physician.
41Refilling Prescriptions for Controlled Substances
- Refills for Schedule II drugs are not permitted.
- Refills for Schedule III, IV, and V drugs are
permitted if the number of refills is indicated
on the prescription. However, the prescription
order may be renewed only up to five times within
six months after the date of issue. After five
renewals or after six months a new prescription
order is required.