Lecture 8 Flashcards

1
Q

Typical Degradation Methods (3)

A
  1. Hydrolysis
  2. Oxidation
  3. Photochemical
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2
Q

Hydrolysis

A
  • Adding water to a product to reverse its creation reaction (condensation)
  • A LOT of drugs and excipients are made using condensation reactions
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3
Q

Carbon and Nitrogen Examples of Hydrolysis

A

Carbon: R-OOH + R’-OH = R-OO-R’ + H2O

Nitrogen: Carboxylic Acid + Amine = Amide + H2O
R-OOH + H-NR’ = R-ON-R’ + H2O

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4
Q

Prodrug Process

A

Produrg ==> Chemical Change ==> Active Drug

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5
Q

Reasons to have Prodrugs (5)

A
  1. Accidents : cell/animal screens
  2. Increased solubility - makes non-polar APIs have better dissolution
  3. Decreased polarity - make polar APIs have better absorption and by extension enhances its bioavailability
  4. Increases bioavailability in other ways
  5. Taste making
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6
Q

Why are prodrugs susceptible in hydrolysis?

A
  • Need to have (sometimes) fast, easy, and predictable conversion into an active drug
  • Leads to chemistry that makes the drug intrinsically susceptible to hydrolytic degradation (mostly esters)
  • Therefore we need to protect the prodrug from degradation via the dosage form
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7
Q

Oxidation

A
  • Often complex, free radical reactions

- Radicals form from transistion metals, radiation, UV, and excess heat

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8
Q

Typical Radical Series of Reactions

A
  1. Key Initiation: R-H ==> R*
  2. Oxygen Addition: R* + O2 ==> ROO*
  3. Cyclic Step: ROO* + R’H ==> ROOH + R’*

If the series ends in a RO*, this can go on to fragment aldehydes, ketones, and carboxylic acids

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9
Q

How to Control Oxidation? (3)

A
  1. Control O2 - limit O2 via scavengers, reduced diffusion barriers, N2 overpacking
  2. Scavenge radicals with antioxidants - when antioxidant takes up the radical, it becomes stable and inactive
  3. Control transition metals ions - Fe-chelator complex (inactive)

Usually utilize more than one of these to control oxidation

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10
Q

Photochemical Degradation

A
  • also complex
  • need a chromophore to absorb the light
  • enough energy in UV and visible light photons
  • two types of photochemical reactions: Type 1 & 2
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11
Q

Photochemical Degradation Chemistries

A
  1. Direct absorption
  2. Type 1 Photosensitized
  3. Type 2 Photosensitized
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12
Q

Direct Absorption

A
  • photon absorbed excited molecule
  • excited molecule undergoes reaction and creates radicals

Ex: R-X + hv ==> {R—-X} ==> R* + X*

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13
Q

Type 1 Photosensitized

A
  • photon absorption by ground state photosensitizer
  • photosensitizer goes on to react with the reactant

PS + hv ==> PS*
PS* + R-H ==> PS- + R* + H+
PS- + O2 ==> O2- + PS
O2- ==>==> H2O2, HO*

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14
Q

Type 2 Photosensitized

A
  • photon absorbed by ground state photosensitizer
  • photosensitizer transfers energy to O2
  • Makes highly reactive “singlet oxygen”
  • “singlet oxygen” is denoted by (1)O2 or (1)[delta]2, where the (1) are superscripts and the 2 are subscripts

PS + hv ==> PS*
PS* + O2 ==> (1)[delta]2 + PS

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15
Q

Why worry about UV light?

A
  • higher energy photons created
  • UV chromophores are much more common than visible light chromophores
  • UV absorption & filtering by packaging & dosage form = much stronger
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16
Q

Chemical Groups liable to Hydrolysis

A
  • those made via hydrolysis (condensation reactions)
  • esters (prodrugs!), amides, etc.
  • VERY common functional groups for drugs
17
Q

Chemical Groups liable to Oxidation

A
  1. Alkenes, especially if polyunsaturated or conjugated
  2. Thiols (R-SH) - not common in drugs, but an example is captopril
  3. Other oxidizable groups - examples are epineprhine or catecholamine
18
Q

Environmental Factors + Degradation

A
  1. Water - for hydrolysis
  2. Oxygen - for oxidation
  3. Also light, heat, radiation from environment

(Drugs are made from water, oxygen, and air)

19
Q

Gases + Degradation

A
  • very uncommon in drugs

- shipped in metal containers to protect from environmental factors

20
Q

Liquids + Degradation

A
  • common in drugs
    a) Solutions - API in water. Liable to hydrolysis, light & oxygen can also degrade it depending on the container
    b) Emulsions, creams, micelles, etc - mixes of hydrophobic materials in aqueous state. Location of API depends on its solubility
  • *If in oil phase, oxygen solubility is higher than water and can drive oxidation
  • *If in aqueous phase, susceptible is hydrolysis instead
21
Q

Solid + Factors of Degradation (4)

A

-most common
Factors favoring degradation:
1. Increased SA:M ratio, more molecules at surface to interact with factors that drive degradation
2. Amorphous state - better penetration of solid by H2O/O2
3. Porosity of dosage form (hard + compact = more difficult to degrade)
4. Uncoated tablets - coatings can slow down H2O/O2 penetration

These same factors can favor rapid dissolution/absorption in the GI tract. Fixing the dissolution could mess up the stability

22
Q

Goal of Solid Drug Forms

A

Want the most resistant physical state with good dissolution.
Ex: Large, perfect crystalline with lowest H2O crystallization is the best
(fine, amorphous particles = worst)

23
Q

Two Physical Protections of API

A
  1. Dosage form that hinders water/oxygen/light access
    Ex: tablet coatings or low diffusion coefficient capsule materials
  2. Packing that hinders water/light/oxygen access
    Ex: brown glass & absorbents (silica gel packets)
24
Q

Chemical Protections of API (2)

A
  1. Using antioxidants to break free radical chain reactions (needs to be in correct phase of multi-phase system)
  2. Using chelating agents to bind transition metals like Fe^+3. Example is EDTA