INTRODUCTION

Quetiapine Fumarate (QF) is a psychotropic agent indicated for the treatment of schizophrenia and manic episodes associated with bipolar disorder. QF possesses good solubility in aqueous fluids (1) and ethanol. Quetiapine is available in the US market with the brand name of Seroquel XR (2). Inadvertent, rapid release of drug in a small period of time, entire amount, or a significant fraction of the drug from a prolonged release dosage form is often referred to as “dose dumping”. Anand O. et al. highlighted United States FDA’s perspective on the dose dumping in general for modified-release dosage forms in the presence of alcoholic beverages and FDA’s efforts to reduce the regulatory burden and unnecessary human studies in generic drug development (3). Subject to the therapeutic indication and the therapeutic index of the drug, dose dumping can pose a significant risk to patients either due to the safety issues or abate efficacy or both (4).

In previous findings by authors, mucoadhesive quetiapine prolonged release tablets prepared by using propylene glycol alginate (PGA) showed that it can be effectively used as controlled release polymer (5). It was observed that the tablets showed prolonged release in 0.1 N hydrochloric acid, acetate buffer solution pH 4.5, and phosphate buffer solution pH 6.8. These formulations were found to be disintegrating relatively quickly and dumped the dose when dissolution tests were performed in 0.1 N hydrochloric acid containing 40% alcohol. According to the United States food and drug administration guidance, alcohol-motivated dose dumping studies must be performed for quetiapine prolonged release tablets at alcohol concentrations of 5, 20, and 40% in 0.1 N hydrochloric acid (6). An ideal prolonged release formulation should have similar dissolution profiles for dissolution tests performed with and without alcohol in 0.1 N hydrochloric acid.

Jedinger et al. (2014) reviewed the physicochemical key factors to be considered in the preparation of alcohol-resistant controlled release dosage forms. They highlighted the availability of a limited number of robust dosage forms that withstand the impact of alcohol (7). Johnson et al. (2008) studied the relative bioavailability of extended-release morphine sulfate capsules coated with drug retarding polymer (KADIAN, 100 mg) (8). Palladone ER capsules (hydromorphone hydrochloride) were withdrawn in light of alcohol-induced dose dumping risk (9). Rosiaux et al. (2013) studied theophylline release from pellets coated with the aqueous ethylcellulose dispersion Aquacoat® ECD 30 containing 10 or 15% medium and high viscosity guar gum for alcohol-induced dose dumping. Pellets coated with blends of ethylcellulose and medium or high viscosity guar gum were virtually unaffected by the addition of 40% ethanol to the release medium (10). Water soluble polymers and water insoluble polymers should exhibit resistance to dose dumping in prolonged release or sustained release dosage forms intended for oral administration. The use of water soluble polymers like hypromellose (11), hydroxyethyl cellulose (12), carbopol (13), and sodium carboxymethyl cellulose (14) has been reported in such studies.

PGA is a propylene glycol ester of alginic acid, a straight glycuronan polymer consisting of a mixture of β-(1 → 4)-d-mannosyluronic acid and α-(1 → 4)-l-gulosyluronic acid residues. PGA possesses solubility in aqueous solutions containing up to 60% w/w of ethanol (95%). PGA is well known stabilizing, suspending, gelling, and emulsifying agent and is normally used in oral and topical dosage forms (15).

Eudragit RS PO (ERS) is a copolymer of ethyl acrylate, methylacrylate, and a low content of methacrylic acid ester with quaternary ammonium groups. ERS has been used as a controlled release agent and possesses poor mucoadhesive properties (16). The quetiapine tablets prepared during screening with ERS alone as a polymer for tablet matrix resulted in dose dumping in the presence of alcohol.

Opadry® II Yellow 85F32004 (Opadry II) is a coating material in which polyvinyl alcohol is a film forming polymer (17). In general, polyvinyl alcohol is used as coating agent, lubricant, and stabilizing agent in formulations. It is soluble in water and slightly soluble in ethanol (95%) (18). ReadiLycoat is a ready to use coating material containing modified hydroxypropyl starch as film former. Hydroxypropyl starch is a binding and thickening agent. It has reported use in controlled-release drug delivery systems as hydrophilic matrices (19).

The objective of the investigation was to optimize novel combination of polymers PGA and ERS in mucoadhesive quetiapine prolonged release tablets 200 mg based on statistical design. The role of combination of polymers in tablet matrix and coating in resisting the alcohol-induced dose dumping was estimated. All the formulations were evaluated for dissolution in 0.1 N hydrochloric acid with and without 40% v/v ethanol.

MATERIALS AND METHODS

Materials

Quetiapine Fumarate was received as purchased sample from Matrix Laboratories Limited, Hyderabad, India. PGA (Kelcoloid K3B426, FMC Biopolymer) ReadiLycoat (Roquette), copovidone (Plasdone S-630, ISP), and microcrystalline cellulose (Avicel® PH 101, FMC Biopolymer) were received as gift samples from Signet Chemical Corporation, Mumbai, India. Eudragit RS PO was received from Evonik, Mumbai, India, as gift sample. Opadry II Yellow 85F32004 was received as gift sample from Colorcon, India.

Methods

Design of Experiments

The experiments were designed using statistical software tool Design Expert, version 9.0 (State-Ease, Minneapolis, MN). The experimental design chosen was based on response surface methodology (RSM) (20) to optimize the levels of PGA and ERS. RSM is a collection of mathematical and statistical techniques for empirical model building. The quantities of independent variables (X 1, X 2, and X 3) in the formulations were changed in master composition for each experimental trial as per Tables I and II. All the experiments were conducted using similar process and processing parameters. I-Optimal statistical design was used to statistically optimize the formulation factors and evaluate the main effects, interaction effects, and cubic effects (21) on the dissolution of QF at 120 min. A three-factor 2-level I-Optimal design was used to explore quadratic response surfaces and constructing second-order polynomial models. The I-Optimal design was specifically selected since it required fewer runs than a central composite design in cases of three variables. This cubic design is outlined by set of points lying at various locations of the cube. A design matrix constituting of 18 experimental runs was constructed. The dependent and independent variables (PGA, X 1; ERS, X 2; and coating, X 3) selected are shown in Table I along with their high and low levels and were chosen based on the results of earlier work (5, 22).

Table I Variables and Responses of Quetiapine Prolonged Release Tablets 200 mg
Table II Master Composition of Quetiapine Prolonged Release Tablets 200 mg

Preparation of Tablets

QF, microcrystalline cellulose, PGA, and ERS were sifted separately through sieve, 30 mesh. The sifted materials were loaded into the high shear mixer granulator (Kevin, HSMG 10, Ahmadabad, India) and mixed for 5 min. Binder solution was prepared separately by dissolving copovidone in isopropyl alcohol under stirring. The binder solution was added to the high shear mixer granulator containing the physical mixture at slow speed for 2 min to form a wet granular mass. The mass was dried in fluid bed processor (FBE-5, Pam Glatt, Mumbai, India) at 60°C as the inlet temperature to achieve loss on drying of the granules less than 3% w/w. The dried granules were sized using comil (Quadro Engineerig, U5-0421, Waterloo, Canada) and sieved through 25 mesh. The extra granular materials, colloidal silicone dioxide, and magnesium stearate were sifted through 30 mesh. The dried granules and sifted extra granular excipients were blended for 5 min in blender (Kalweka HD-410 AC, Ahmedabad, India). The tablets were compressed on single rotary tablet compression machine (Cadmach, CMD3-16, Ahmedabad, India).

Coating of the Tablets

The coating solution was prepared by dispersing Opadry II Yellow 85F32004 or Readilycoat in purified water and stirred for 45 min. The tablets were coated in automated perforated coating machine (Ganscoater, GAC-275, Thane, India) at an inlet temperature of 55°C.

In Vitro Drug Release Studies

The in vitro drug release of quetiapine from QF prolonged release tablets 200 mg (n = 12) was performed using USP I (basket) apparatus (Electrolab, 2695 separation module, Mumbai, Inida). The individual tablets were placed in dissolution vessels containing 900 mL of 0.1 N hydrochloric acid or hydrochloric acid containing 40% v/v of alcohol. The study was conducted at a rotational speed of 200 rpm for 120 min. The sampling was done with an interval of 15 min as described by FDA guidance for quetiapine extended release tablets (6). The drug release from the formulations at 120 min was selected as responses. The in vitro drug release was also performed for Seroquel XL 200 mg tablets in 0.1 N hydrochloric acid with and without 40% v/v ethanol.

High-Performance Liquid Chromatography (HPLC) Analysis of Quetiapine

The analysis of samples was performed using high-performance liquid chromatography (HPLC; Waters, 2695 separation module, Singapore) system equipped with quaternary pump, UV-Visible spectrophotometric detector (Perkin Elmer, Lambda 25, Massachusetts, USA), and C18 column (X-Terra; 150 × 4.6 mm, 5 μm) at ambient temperature. The mobile phase used was a mixture of ammonium acetate buffer and acetonitrile at a ratio of 400:600. A flow rate of 1 mL/min was maintained, and the detection wavelength was 292 nm (23). Required precision and accuracy of the HPLC method were checked and were found to be within limits (percent coefficient of variation was less than 15%). Sample was filtered through 0.4 μ membrane filter, diluted with mobile phase, and 10 μL was spiked into column.

Statistical Analysis

Statistical comparisons were made using Student’s t test using statistical software tool (GraphPad Software, Inc., CA, USA). The results were considered significant at 95% confidence interval (p < 0.05) and were expressed as mean ± SD.

RESULTS

In Vitro Drug Release Studies

The dissolution profiles of QF prolonged release tablets prepared using PGA and ERS are showed in Table I and Figs 1, 2, 3, and 4. Formulations F11 and F13 showed highest and lowest drug release at 120 min, respectively, in 0.1 N hydrochloric acid. Whereas, 30 to 100% of the drug release was found (F13 and F11) in 0.1 N hydrochloric acid containing 40% v/v ethanol. Compositions F10, F11, and F17 had drug release of more than 80% in alcohol containing dissolution media.

Fig. 1
figure 1

In vitro release profiles of quetiapine prolonged release tablets 200 mg in 0.1 N HCL (F1–F9 and Seroquel XL 200 mg)

Fig. 2
figure 2

In vitro release profiles of quetiapine prolonged release tablets 200 mg in 0.1 N HCL (F10–F18 and Seroquel XL 200 mg)

Fig. 3
figure 3

In vitro release profiles of quetiapine prolonged release tablets 200 mg in 0.1 N HCL with 40% v/v ethanol (F1–F9 and Seroquel XL 200 mg)

Fig. 4
figure 4

In vitro release profiles of quetiapine prolonged release tablets 200 mg in 0.1 N HCL with 40% v/v ethanol (F10–F18 and Seroquel XL 200 mg)

Design of Experiments

A three-factor I-Optimal design was used to optimize the formulation variables. The independent variables and responses of all the experiments are shown in Table I. The effect of variables on responses (R1 and R2) is shown in Fig. 6.

Fitting Data to the Model

The mathematical model was built using the analysis section of the software. The minimum and maximum responses for the response R1 were found to be 30 and 46%, respectively. The data standalone was used for the development of the model. Mathematical transformation was required if the ratio of maximum to minimum was greater than 3. Therefore, no mathematical transformation was performed for response R1 with ratios of 1.53. The minimum and maximum values for the response R2 were found to be 30 and 100%, respectively, with a ratio of 3.33. Since the ratio was more than 3, the data were transformed to other equation (inverse equation) in order to fit the mathematical model. The parameters of ANOVA are shown in Table III.

Table III Summary of Results of Regression Analysis for Responses R1 and R2

The response surface models (for R1 and R2) were calculated to estimate the quantitative effects for the different combination of factors and their levels using Design Expert. The models are shown in equation A and B.

  1. A.

    R1 (dissolution in 0.1 N HCl) = 38.15 − 5.12 X 1 − 3.22 X 2 + 0.40 X 3.

  2. B.

    R2 (1/dissolution in 0.1 N HCl containing 40% ethanol) = 0.019 + 0.00046 X 1 + 0.00067 X 2 + 0.001049 X 3 + 0.00018 X 1, X 2 + 0.000012 X 1, X 3 + 0.000051 X 2, X 3.

The equations are useful for identifying the relative impact of the factors by comparing the factor coefficients.

DISCUSSION

Discussion on In Vitro Drug Release Studies

The oral controlled release formulations are designed in general based on dissolution, diffusion, or a combination of both the mechanisms. The prolonged release dosage forms are designed such a way that they release the drug over a long period of time usually longer than the typical dosing interval for a conventional formulation (24). Consumption of alcohol during the medication of prolonged release tablets may pose a serious risk to the safety of the patient because of the probability of dose dumping in the presence of alcohol. Regulatory agencies are thus stressing the sponsors to demonstrate that the prolonged release product applied for obtaining marketing authorizations is resistant to such type of alcohol-induced dose dumping (4).

The dissolution of Seroquel XL 200 mg was about 40 and 30% in 0.1 N HCl and 0.1 N HCl containing 40% v/v ethanol, respectively, at 120 min. To match the similarity norm, the novel formulation should also show similar dissolution in 0.1 N HCl and in 0.1 N HCl containing 40% v/v ethanol. Hence, the limit of dissolution (target dissolution) was thus specified as 30–40% (4). The in vitro release studies were performed in 0.1 N HCl containing no and highest proportion (40%) alcohol. If the formulations show resistance to dose dumping in 40% alcoholic solution, then the same formulations are also anticipated to show resistance in low proportion alcoholic solutions. Therefore, the in vitro release studies were performed only in 0.1 N HCl containing 40% alcoholic solutions apart from 0.1 N HCl. Among the experiments, four formulations with different proportions of PGA and ERS showed desired dissolution for response R1. Formulations F6, F7, F9, and F13 were the formulations that were meeting the target criteria demonstrating the satisfactory resistance to the alcohol-induced dose dumping. Compositions F6, F7, and F9 had a slightly more drug release in dissolution medium with alcohol compared to the drug release in medium without alcohol, at 120 min time point. Whereas, composition F13 has the same percentage of drug release in both the dissolution medium at 120 min time point. Therefore, composition F13 was a superior formulation than other three formulations in resisting alcohol-induced dose dumping. The results attributed that the composition of the formulation in terms of polymers and coating was strongly influencing the in vitro release. The drug release of 30 to 40% was to be achieved in alcohol containing media for the same composition to demonstrate resistance to alcohol-induced dose dumping. Thus, for a given composition, the drug release profile should be same in both the dissolution tests. The differences in the dissolution were due to the diverse properties of polymers. PGA is a water soluble polymer which swells immediately and forms gel-like structure when it comes in contact with water. Because of swelling property, PGA gives effective mucoadhesion and controlled release in aqueous dissolution mediums (5). In the pervasion of ethanol in 0.1 N hydrochloric acid, the gel gets eroded immediately (15). Addition of ERS with PGA in the tablet matrix was acting synergistically to resist an alcohol-induced dose dumping. It was assumed that ERS was providing structural support to the swollen and gelled mass of PGA and was reducing the erosion of PGA in alcohol containing dissolution media. ReadiLycoat consists of hydroxypropyl starch as a film former. It has poor solubility in alcohol. Therefore, ReadiLycoat was helping the tablets in resisting the alcohol when compared to Opadry II.

Design Analysis

The summary of ANOVA (Table III) suggests that the parameters for both the responses are meeting. The correlation coefficients are more than 0.91 for both the responses indicating the linearity of the respective models. The difference between the “predicted R-squared” and “adjusted R-squared” was below 0.2. The “Adeq Precision” (signal to noise ratio) of the responses R1 and R2 were found to be 22.165 and 33.112, respectively. The results indicated that the mathematical equations generated were sufficient for the optimization of composition and navigation of design space.

Three-Dimensional Plots and Response Surface Analysis

Three-dimensional response surface plots are shown in Fig. 5a–d, which are very useful to study the interaction effects of the factors on the responses. The plots are useful in studying effects of two factors on the response at one time. In all the depicted figures, the third variable was kept at a constant level. In other words, the effect of change in PGA and ERS concentrations on in vitro release profiles in 0.1 N hydrochloric acid with and without alcohol is presented. The plots show that the dissolution was decreasing linearly in 0.1 N hydrochloric acid with increase in PGA concentration from 75 to 150 mg. The increase in concentration of ERS from 60 to 165 mg has further decreased the quetiapine dissolution. There was no significant difference (p < 0.05) in dissolution rate and extent for tablets with coating materials Opadry II and ReadiLycoat in dissolution media 0.1 N hydrochloric acid. Curvilinear decrease was observed for R2 with increase in levels of PGA and ERS. At the highest concentration of these two polymers in the tablets, the dissolution in alcohol containing media was least. Drug release from formulations coated with ReadiLycoat (Fig. 6a) was less compared with formulation coated with Opadry II (Fig. 6b) in alcohol containing dissolution media. It indicated that RediLycoat was showing more resistance for the dissolution in media containing alcohol compared to Opadry II.

Fig. 5
figure 5

3-dimensional response surface plots. Response 1 is shown in a (Opadry II as X 3) and b (ReadiLycoat as X 3), response 2 is shown in c (Opadry II as X3) and d (ReadiLycoat as X3)

Fig. 6
figure 6

Overlay plots to show the design space. a Design space plot for ReadiLycoat (X 3). b Design space plot for Opadry II(X 3)

Validation of the Model

Six checkpoint compositions were gathered from the RSM, the formulation and predicted responses are shown in Table IV. The predicted and experimental responses are compared in order to validate the model and to calculate the prediction error. The prediction error was found to be below 7% indicating that the observed responses were very close to the predicted values. Percentage prediction error is useful in constituting the validity of generated equations and describes how close the predicted responses to that of actual values. The values of <15 are desirable to have closeness of the predicted values with the actual values (25).

Table IV Validation of the Design Model

Optimization and Design Space

The constraints are set to find out the range of composition that met the target dissolution. The targets of both the responses are fixed as 30–40% at 120 min based on Seroquel® XL 200 mg dissolution profiles (Figs. 1, 2, 3, and 4). In the same section criteria, the independent variables were set at their minimum and maximum ranges. Composition F13 was the best composition from the trials that was meeting the desired dissolution profiles in both the dissolution media and was the only composition that had same drug release in media with and without alcohol. Benefit of design of experiments was that with the available responses for the controlled variables, it was possible to have more than one formulation which may meet the targeted dissolution. Overlay plots for responses R1 and R2 generated design space (Fig. 6). Design space for compositions coated with Opadry II was very narrow compared to the formulations coated with ReadiLycoat. Any combination of PGA and ERS from the design space can assure resistance to alcohol-induced dose dumping. As depicted in Fig. 6, to prepare a formulation of quetiapine prolonged release tablets resistant to alcohol-induced dose dumping, minimum polymer levels of PGA and ERS required are 95 and 120 mg when 24 mg of Readylycoat was coated. With 24 mg of Opadry II coating on the tablets, minimum polymer levels required for the same purpose are 110 mg of PGA and 140 mg of ERS.

CONCLUSIONS

PGA alone in the tablet matrix cannot resist alcohol-induced dose dumping. The current study conclusively demonstrates the use of I-Optimal statistical design was valid for predicting the optimum quetiapine prolonged release tablets 200 mg formulation which resists to alcohol-induced dose dumping. The derived polynomial equations, three-dimensional response surface diagrams and overlay plots aid in predicting the values of the selected independent variables which can give desired dissolution profiles 0.1 N hydrochloric acid. Quetiapine prolonged release tablets prepared using a novel combination of polymers PGA and ERS at levels above 95 and 120 mg, respectively, and coated with ReadiLycoat, as per the derived design space can resist to alcohol-induced dose dumping.