The aim of this article is to show a procedure to build the design space for the primary drying of a pharmaceuticals lyophilization process. Mathematical simulation of the process is used to identify the operating conditions that allow preserving product quality and meeting operating constraints pos
Advanced approach to build the design space for the primary drying of a pharmaceutical freeze-drying process
โ Scribed by Davide Fissore; Roberto Pisano; Antonello A. Barresi
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 2011
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 542 KB
- Volume
- 100
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0022-3549
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โฆ Synopsis
This paper deals with the design space of a pharmaceutical freeze-drying process. Mathematical modeling is used to investigate the effect of the operating conditions [shelf temperature (T shelf ) and chamber pressure (P c )] on product temperature (that has to remain below a limit value) and sublimation flux (that has to be lower than a level that would cause choked flow). The algorithm takes into account the variation of the design space with time due to the increase in the dried layer thickness. Besides T shelf and P c , the dried layer thickness is used as the third coordinate of the diagram, thus resulting in just one graph that can be used to build recipes with variable operating conditions, as well as to analyze the effect of process failures. Such results are compared with those obtained when the variation of the design space with time is not accounted for; in this case, the design space comprises those operating conditions that fulfill the operation constraints throughout primary drying, thus giving a much more conservative recipe when designing the process or potentially misleading results when analyzing process failures. Finally, the proposed method has been used to design, and experimentally validate, a recipe for a pharmaceutical formulation.
๐ SIMILAR VOLUMES
The evolution of product temperature and of residual ice content in the various vials of a batch during a freeze-drying process can be significantly affected by local conditions around each vial. In fact, vapor fluid dynamics in the drying chamber determines the local pressure that, taking into acco
A rigorous unsteady state and spatially multidimensional model is presented and solved to describe the dynamic behavior of the primary and secondary drying stages of the lyophilization of a pharmaceutical product in vials for different operational policies. The results in this work strongly motivate