Mroueh, Mohamad; Kyriacos, Soula Boustani; Boukarim, Chawki; Safi, William; Maroon, Aline Bou; El-Khoury, Ghada; Shehayeb, Rabih; SOP; 199590020; 200104046; Pharmaceutical Sciences Department; mmroueh@lau.edu.lb; ghada.khoury@lau.edu.lb
Abstract:
The purpose of this study was to compare the technical quality of ciprofloxacin tablets and examine the feasibility of
biopharmaceutical classification system (BCS) biowaiver. Ciprofloxacin is a synthetic quinolone derivative anti-infective agent that
has been classified as a Class 3 substance according to the biopharmaceutics classification system. Due to the importance of ciprofloxacin
as an antibiotic for widely resistant bacteria and the importance of price in a community basis, different ciprofloxacin
products available on the market were analyzed. The possibility of extending biowaivers to ciprofloxacin was also examined. Waiver
for Class 2 and Class 3 drugs is sometimes scientifically justified. Ciprofloxacin has properties that are intermediate between BCS
Classes 2 and 3, as the drug is highly soluble below pH 6 and poorly soluble above this pH. Ten generic brands and the innovator
brand were compared on friability, hardness, average weight, content uniformity, disintegration and dissolution. In vitro testing
indicates significant variations among some brands in terms of hardness, disintegration and dissolution. Dissolution testing met pharmacopeial
requirements for all brands. However, significant variations in dissolution profiles were observed in 0.1N HCl and in
phosphate buffer (pH 6.8) with no difference detected in acetate buffer (pH 4.5). The results suggest that the formulation and/or the
manufacturing process affect the dissolution and thus the bioavailability of the drug products. The significance of the observed in
vitro differences must be confirmed by an in vivo bioequivalence study.
Citation:
Kyriacos, S. B., Boukarim, C., Safi, W., Mroueh, M., Maroun, A. B., El-Khoury, G., & Shehayeb, R. (2009). In vitro testing of ciprofloxacin formulations and preliminary study on BCS biowaiver. Journal of Food and Drug Analysis, 17(2).