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Biopharmaceutical classification of desloratadine – not all drugs are classified the easy way Cover

Biopharmaceutical classification of desloratadine – not all drugs are classified the easy way

Open Access
|Jan 2020

Abstract

The biopharmaceutical classification of drugs was designed as a basis for bio-waivers – a mechanism with the double ethical benefit of delivering new drug formulations to the market with less human testing and lower cost. However, many drugs defy simple classification because in vitro permeability and stability assessment can be challenging as shown in this study for desloratadine. Literature shows that desloratadine is highly soluble, while data on luminal stability and permeability are circumstantial. Combined with borderline bioavailability and not really known fraction of absorbed dose, desloratadine was found to be a good example for showing the innovative in vitro approaches necessary to unambiguously classify desloratadine according to Biopharmaceutical Classification System (BCS) guideline. Presented study undoubtedly confirmed that desloratadine solubility is high and dissolution is very rapid for immediate release reference tablets. We have demonstrated deslorata-dine stability under legally required conditions and also in more physiologically relevant media. High in vitro desloratadine permeability was confirmed using Caco-2 and Parallel Artificial Membrane Permeability Assay (PAMPA). Well-established in vitro model with rat intestinal tissue could not be used due to reasons elaborated in this paper.

DOI: https://doi.org/10.2478/acph-2020-0006 | Journal eISSN: 1846-9558 | Journal ISSN: 1330-0075
Language: English
Page range: 131 - 144
Accepted on: May 31, 2019
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Published on: Jan 16, 2020
In partnership with: Paradigm Publishing Services
Publication frequency: 4 issues per year
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© 2020 Katja Berginc, Nadica Sibinovska, Simon Žakelj, Jurij Trontelj, Igor Legen, published by Croatian Pharmaceutical Society
This work is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 3.0 License.