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Malvern systems accelerate nasal spray testing

A Malvern Instruments product story
Edited by the Processingtalk editorial team Mar 23, 2009

Malvern Instruments has illustrated how particle characterisation techniques of laser diffraction (Spraytec) and automated image analysis (Morphologi G3) can accelerate nasal spray testing.

Both methods are time efficient, providing detailed insight for formulation development and supporting streamlined analysis for QC.

Malvern particle characterization systems accelerate nasal spray testing

Malvern particle characterization systems accelerate nasal spray testing

FDA guidance covering bioavailability/bioequivalence studies for locally acting nasal sprays specifies that critical parameters, such as active drug particle size and droplet size, are measured to assess performance.

Automated image analysis can reduce the time taken to measure drug particle size from two hours with manual microscopy to just 20 minutes.

Laser diffraction, which has a data acquisition rate of 2,500 measurements per second, is able to track the evolution of formulation droplet size during a spray event, providing researchers with the results required to optimise the process of drug delivery to the nasal mucosa.

In the study, an existing manual microscopy method was transformed into a standard operating procedure for the Morphologi G3, Malvern's automated particle characterisation system that uses image analysis technology.

Size and shape data were rapidly captured for a greater number of active drug particles compared to the existing manual method, giving the data greater statistical relevance.

Classification software defined the particle populations of interest and eliminated data for active-excipient agglomerates.

Automating the entire analytical process not only accelerates measurement, it also removes any operator bias.

Using the Spraytec laser diffraction system, the evolution of droplet size can be tracked in real time during the actuation of a nasal spray pump.

This capability was used to quantify the impact of solution viscosity on the size of droplets produced during aerosolisation.

The results show that more viscous solutions produce a larger droplet size.

Spraytec is suitable for the in situ measurement of suspension or solution droplets in the size range 0.1 to 2,000 microns, making it suitable for the analysis of nasal sprays and orally inhaled products.

A full report on the studies can be downloaded at the company's website.

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