Formulation of Water Insoluble Drugs for IV Injections
Khalid Akhter Ansari, Team Lead, Novartis
The evolving trends in the combinatorial chemistry and drug design
have led to the development of drug candidates with greater lipophilicity, high
molecular weight and erratic bioavailability due to poor water solubility. About
40% of drugs with market approval and nearly 90% of molecules in the discovery pipeline
are poorly water-soluble. Because of the clinical demand for new and more
efficacious anti-cancer, antiviral, and anti-infective drugs, many of these new
drugs must be formulated for injection. Poor water solubility challenges can be
overcome by various formulation approaches such as pH manipulation, salt
formation, and cosolvent and surfactant addition, or by advance drug delivery techniques
such as cyclodextrine complexation, liposomal encapsulation, nanosuspension,
lipid drug delivery systems etc. Numerous drugs associated with poor solubility
and low bioavailabilities have been formulated into successful injectable drug products.
Several marketed drugs were reformulated to improve efficacy, safety and patient
compliance.
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