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Effect of pharmaceutical excipients on aqueous stability of rabeprazole sodium

Title
Effect of pharmaceutical excipients on aqueous stability of rabeprazole sodium
Authors
Ren S.Park M.-J.Sah H.Lee B.-J.
Ewha Authors
사홍기
SCOPUS Author ID
사홍기scopus
Issue Date
2008
Journal Title
International Journal of Pharmaceutics
ISSN
0378-5173JCR Link
Citation
International Journal of Pharmaceutics vol. 350, no. 41276, pp. 197 - 204
Indexed
SCIE; SCOPUS WOS scopus
Document Type
Article
Abstract
The chemical stability of a proton-pump inhibitor, rabeprazole sodium, was evaluated in simulated intestinal fluid (pH 6.8) containing various 'Generally Recognized As Safe (GRAS)'-listed excipients, including Brij® 58, Poloxamer 188, Cremophor RH40, Gelucire 44/14 and PEG 6000. After incubation at 37 and 60 °C, the amounts of rabeprazole and its degradation product, thioether-rabeprazole, were quantitated by HPLC analysis. The main degradation product was separated and characterized by LC/MS. The degradation of rabeprazole followed first-order kinetics. In the absence of any excipients, the rate constants (k) obtained at 37 and 60 °C were 0.75 and 2.78 h-1, respectively. In contrast, the addition of excipients improved its stability. Among several excipients tested in this study, Brij® 58 displayed the greatest stabilizing effect. For instance, at 37 and 60 °C, Brij® 58 reduced the k values to 0.22 and 0.53 h-1, respectively. The stabilizing mechanisms of these hydrophilic polymeric excipients with optimal HLB values could be partially explained in terms of their solubilizing efficiency and micellar formation for thioether-rabeprazole. In conclusion, rabeprazole formulations that contain suitable excipients would improve its stability in the intestinal tract, thereby maximizing bioavailability. © 2007.
DOI
10.1016/j.ijpharm.2007.08.035
Appears in Collections:
약학대학 > 약학과 > Journal papers
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