This invention relates to methods of making pharmaceutical dosage forms and, more particularly, to manufacturing a filled linker unit for multipart capsules using injection molding.
Various types of pharmaceutical dosage forms are known for oral dosing. Such capsules generally comprise an envelope wall of a pharmaceutically acceptable, e.g. orally ingestible, polymer material such as gelatin, although other materials for capsule walls, e.g. starch and cellulose based polymers are also known. Such capsules generally have soft walls made by forming a film on a capsule former, which is then allowed to dry. Rigid walled capsules made by injection molding are also known; see for example U.S. Pat. No. 4,576,284, U.S. Pat. No. 4,591,475, U.S. Pat. No. 4,655,840, U.S. Pat. No. 4,738,724, U.S. Pat. No. 4,738,817, and U.S. Pat. No. 4,790,881 (all to Warner Lambert). These disclose specific constructions of capsules made of gelatin, starch and other polymers, and methods of making them by injection molding of hydrophilic polymer, e.g., water mixtures. U.S. Pat. No. 4,576,284 specifically discloses such capsules provided with a cap which closes the capsule, which is formed in situ on the filled capsule by molding. U.S. Pat. No. 4,738,724 discloses a wide range of rigid capsule shapes and parts.
Multi-compartment capsules, including those of the type where each compartment has different drug release characteristics or, for example, contains a different drug substance or formulation, are also known; see for example U.S. Pat. No. 4,738,724 (Warner-Lambert), U.S. Pat. No. 5,672,359 (University of Kentucky), U.S. Pat. No. 5,443,461 (Alza Corp.), WO 9516438 (Cortecs Ltd.), WO 9012567 (Helminthology Inst.), DE-A-3727894, BE 900950 (Warner Lambert), FR 2524311, NL 7610038 (Tapanhony N V), FR 28646 (Pluripharm), and U.S. Pat. No. 3,228,789 (Glassman), U.S. Pat. No. 3,186,910 (Glassman), among others. U.S. Pat. No. 4,738,817, U.S. Pat. No. 3,228,789, and U.S. Pat. No. 3,186,910 each disclose a multicompartment capsule made of a water-plasticized gelatin.
Pharmaceutical dosage forms that comprise a matrix of a solid polymer, in which a drug substance is dispersed, embedded or dissolved as a solid solution are also known. Such matrixes may be formed by an injection molding process. This technology is discussed in Cuff G. and Raouf F., Pharmaceutical Technology, June 1998, p. 96-106. Some specific formulations for such dosage forms are, for example disclosed in U.S. Pat. No. 4,678,516; U.S. Pat. No. 4,806,337; U.S. Pat. No. 4,764,378; U.S. Pat. No. 5,004,601; U.S. Pat. No. 5,135,752; U.S. Pat. No. 5,244,668; U.S. Pat. No. 5,139,790; U.S. Pat. No. 5,082,655 among others, in which a polyethylene glycol (“PEG”) matrix is used and solid dosage forms are made by injection molding.
The content of the above-mentioned background patent publications are incorporated herein by way of reference.
See, also for example, WO 01/08666, WO 02/060385, US 2004/0115256, US 2006/0049311, WO 02/060384, US 2003/0068369, US 2004/0166153, WO 04/010978, US 2006/0057201, WO 05/009380, US 2005/0175687, WO 05/089726, US 2005/0249807, U.S. 60/968,383, and U.S. 61/061,275, each of the disclosures of which are incorporated herein by way of reference.
Also, the content of PCT/EP00/07295 entitled “MULTI-COMPONENT PHARMACEUTICAL DOSAGE FORM” assigned to the assignee of the present application is incorporated herein by way of reference.
In one aspect of the present disclosure, a method of manufacturing a linker is provided. The linker includes a jacket radially confining a preformed tablet having an outer surface. The method includes grasping the tablet with a plurality of pincers and positioning the grasped tablet and the pincers in a mold. The method also includes injecting jacket material to substantially cover the outer tablet surface and the pincers to form the jacket. The method further includes extracting the jacketed tablet from the mold and removing the pincers from the jacketed tablet.
In another aspect of the present disclosure, a molding apparatus for forming a linker having a preformed tablet and an injection molded jacket is provided. The molding apparatus includes an inner surface defining an interior and a plurality of pincers movable between a first position wherein the plurality of pincers are disposed within the interior and a second position wherein the plurality of pincers are not disposed within the interior.
It is to be understood that both the foregoing general description and the following detailed description are exemplary and explanatory only and are not restrictive of the invention, as claimed.
The accompanying drawings, which are incorporated in and constitute a part of this specification, illustrate several embodiments of the invention and together with the description, serve to explain the principles of the disclosure.
The invention will now be described by way of example with reference to:
Reference will now be made in detail to the present embodiments of the invention, examples of which are illustrated in the accompanying drawings.
In accordance with the present disclosure, a method is disclosed for making a linker configured to connect two dosage form units from the group including capsule compartments and closure caps with the linker holding a solid drug substance. Specifically, the linker includes a preformed solid drug substance in tablet form, the tablet having a longitudinal axis and being substantially cylindrical with opposed axial end faces. The linker further includes a jacket formed around and radially confining the preformed tablet, the jacket having an outer wall with longitudinal ends, one or both of the jacket ends being opened for dispensing the drug substance from the respective end faces. The linker may further include the jacket outer wall having snap-fit elements adjacent each longitudinal end configured to interact with complementary snap-fit elements on capsule compartments and/or closure caps.
Drug substances for use in dosage forms suitable for being administered orally to a patient can be retained within a capsule or cap unit interconnected with linker 10 can include any suitable or conventional form, such as, for example, a powder, granules, compact, microcapsules, solid form, gel, syrup, or liquid, provided that the capsule or cap unit wall material is sufficiently inert to the liquid content of the latter three forms. Additionally the drug substances must be sufficiently compatible with the solid drug substance parts 12a, 12b and/or tablet 12 if a respective closed jacket end wall, e.g., wall 28 as discussed below, is not provided.
With continued reference to
For example, in linker 10, shown in cross-section in
Moreover, if dissolution/dispersion of an increased quantity of a solid drug substance is desired, tablet end faces 16 and/or 18 may be shaped with a rounded, extended face such as 18b. Other configurations of an extended tablet end face that may be desirable include those depicted in
Jacket 20 may also include a raised band 30 circumferentially formed on the periphery of outer jacket wall 22, preferably midway between longitudinal ends 24 and 26. Band 30 includes opposed side surfaces 32, 34 configured for abutting contact with the wall ends of dosage form units, e.g., a capsule and/or cap, interconnected with linker 10. Raised band 30 may further include one or more concave depressions 36 to accommodate injection molding overflow as is known in the art. Jacket 20 may further include snap-fit elements 38, 40 formed on an outer surface of jacket wall 22 between raised band 30 and respective jacket longitudinal ends 24, 26. As shown in
Additionally, jacket 20 may include one or more radially directed apertures 47 (see
As will be further described below, manufacturing linker 10 may involve the use of pincers, e.g., gripping elements, to position and hold tablet 12 with respect to a mold while injecting the jacket material to surround tablet 12, and the pincers, during an injection molding process. As such, a plurality of slots 42 may be formed adjacent one or both jacket ends 24, 26 when the pincers are removed from tablet 12 according the molding processes of the present disclosure as discussed in more detail below. That is, slots 42 may be an artifact of the pincers and may be formed as a result of jacket 20 being injection molded around tablet 12 and the pincers. Slots 42 may be radially spaced about axis 14 and may or may not be equally spaced about axis 14. Slots 42 may each extend only partially around the circumference of tablet 12. It is contemplated that if tablet 12 includes an extended face 18a, 18b, 18c, slots 42 may be omitted adjacent to the extended end face as will be explained in more detail below. Linker 10 may further include a plurality of flanges 44 (referring to
Referring to
With reference to
Molded jackets 12 and 114 of Linkers 10 and 100 may each be made of a transitional polymer. A transitional polymer is a polymer that changes shape, form, or structure within a gastro-intestinal environment, e.g., dispersible, dissolvable, disintegrable, breachable, swellable, partially or completely soluble, fracturable, or otherwise changeable when exposed to stomach pH and/or in intestine pH. Suitable polymers for linker 10 may include: polyvinyl alcohol (PVA), natural polymers (such as polysaccharides like pullulan, carrageenan, xanthan, chitosan or agar gums), polyethylene glycols (PEG), polyethylene oxides (PEO), mixtures of PEGS and PEOS, hydroxypropylmethylcellulose (HPMC), methylcellulose, hydroxyethylcellulose, hydroxyethyl methylcellulose, hydroxypropylcellulose, methacrylic acid copolymer (such as Eudragit E™, Eudragit L™ and/or Eudragit S™), ammonium methacrylate copolymers (such as Eudragit RL™ and/or Eudragit RS™), carboxymethylcellulose, povidone (polyvinyl pyrrolidone), polyglycolysed glycerides (such as Gelucire 44/14™, Gelucire 50/02™, Gelucire 50/13™ and Gelucire 53/10™), carboxyvinyl polymers (such as Carbopols™), polyoxyethylene-polyoxypropylene copolymers (such as Poloxamer 188™), and acrylic and/or methacrylic acid-based polymers. The Eudragit™ polymers discussed above for example are extrudable and may for example be plasticised with e.g. triethyl citrate, or glyceryl monostearate.
Preferred polymers are orally ingestible polymers and include hydroxypropyl methylcellulose acetate succinate (HPMC-AS), polyvinyl alcohol, hydroxypropyl methyl cellulose, and other cellulose-based polymers. Preferred polymers also include polymer materials which preferentially dissolve or disintegrate at different points in the digestive tract. Such polymers include the known acrylic and/or methacrylic acid-based polymers which are transitional in intestinal fluids, e.g. the Eudragit series of commercially available polymers. Examples of these include Eudragit E™, such as Eudragit E 100™ or Eudragit 4135F™, which preferentially dissolves in the more acid pH of the stomach, or enteric polymers such as Eudragit L™ and/or Eudragit S™ which preferentially dissolve in the more alkaline pH of the intestine, and preferred polymers also include polymers which dissolve slowly, e.g. at a predetermined rate in the digestive tract, such as Eudragit RL™ e.g. Eudragit RL 100™, and/or Eudragit RS™ e.g. Eudragit R100™, and/or blends of such Eudragit™ polymers.
The polymers may include other substances to modify their properties and to adapt them to various applications, including, for example, the following general classes of substances: surfactants, such as Polysorbate 80™, sodium lauryl sulphate, and Polyoxyl 40™ hydrogenated castor oil; absorption enhancers, such as Labrasol™, Transcutol™; glidants, such as stearyl alcohol, talc, magnesium stearate, silicon dioxide, amorphous silicic acid, fumed silica, Simeticone™; plasticizers, such as triethyl citrate, acetyl triethyl citrate, tributyl citrate, acetyl tributyl citrate, glyceryl monostearate, diethyl phthalate, dibutyl phthalate, propylene glycol, triacetin and castor oil; substances for release modification, such as ethyl cellulose and cellulose acetate phthalate; disintegrants, such as sodium starch glycollate, croscarmellose sodium, crospovidone (cross-linked polyvinyl pyrrolodone), coloring agents, flavoring agents and sweetening agents.
In accordance with the present disclosure, a molding apparatus is disclosed for forming linkers 10, 100 having a preformed tablet 12, 102 and an injection molded jacket 20, 114. Specifically, the apparatus includes an inner surface defining an interior. The apparatus further includes a plurality of pincers movable between a first position wherein the plurality of pincers are disposed within the interior and a second position wherein the plurality of pincers are not disposed within the interior.
Referring to
Second end wall 168 may include a first plurality of pincers 170 that may be configured to selectively engage, e.g., grasp, a tablet, e.g., tablet 12 and/or 102, on a first axial end thereof. Second end wall 168 may be configured to maneuver and position the grasped tablet with respect to walls 162, 164, and 166. First plurality of pincers 170 may include any conventional gripping elements configured to releasably grasp and hold the tablet via, for example, linkage system. It is contemplated that any portion of first plurality of pincers 170 may engage the tablet, that is, the full gripping length of the pincers may or may not engage the outer surface of the tablet. It is also contemplated that first plurality of pincers 170 may engage the tablet by flexing in a radial direction so as to deflect and subsequently grasp and support the tablet.
As described above and illustrated in
Referring to
Molding apparatus 160 may further include a second plurality of pincers 182 extending from first end wall 166 into interior 174, second plurality of pincers 182 may be cantilevered with respect to first end wall 166, or separately controllable by an actuating mechanism (not shown). Second plurality of pincers 182 may be fixed or movable with respect to first end wall 166 and may be configured to engage and/or support the tablet at a second end thereof, opposite the end engaged by first plurality of pincers 170. Second plurality of pincers 182 may be configured to flex in a radial direction with respect to longitudinal axis 175 so as to deflect and subsequently grasp and support the tablet with respect to molding apparatus 160. It is contemplated that the second plurality of pincers 182 may be omitted from molding apparatus 160 and the tablet may be supported via only the first plurality of pincers 170.
First plurality of pincers 170 may selectively and automatically grasp a tablet and second side wall 168 may selectively and automatically maneuver and position the tablet with respect to first end wall 166. The longitudinal axis of the tablet may substantially align with longitudinal axis 175. First plurality of pincers 170 may apply a force to the tablet in a direction aligned with longitudinal axis 175, that force may be transferred into a radial force acting on second plurality of pincers 182, and may deflect one or more of second plurality of pincers 182. First plurality of pincers 170 may cease application of the force and the deflection of one or more of second plurality of pincers may produce radial and/or axial forces with respect to the tablet to support the tablet with respect to first end wall 166. It is contemplated that second end wall 168 and first plurality of pincers 170 may be configured to similarly grasp a tablet located within a bin or on a conveyor.
First and second side walls 162, 164 may be moved in direction A to form interior 174 around the tablet. That is, interior 174 may be sealed between first and second side walls 162, 164 and first and second end walls 166, 168 so as to define a space between the tablet and inner surface 172 within which jacket material may be injection molded. It is contemplated that jacket material may be injected via channel 184 into the space between the tablet and inner surface 172 formed by relief 180. The jacket material flows within the space, surrounds the tablet and first and second plurality of pincers 170, 182 and fills the features of the contour of inner surface 172. Injection molding processes are well known in the art and, thus, are not further described. Upon solidification of the jacket material, the formed linker, e.g., linker 10 or 100, may be removed from molding apparatus 162 by retracting first and second side walls 162, 164 in direction A, retracting first plurality of pincers 170 along with the molded linker in direction B thereby disengaging the formed linker from the second plurality of pincers 182. Thereafter, first plurality of pincers 170 may be removed from the formed linker.
It is contemplated that the tablet may be positioned within interior 174 at any desired location and that first and second plurality of pincers 170, 182 may be sized and dimensioned so as to provide any desired forces to grasp, maneuver, locate, and/or support the tablet within interior 174. It is also contemplated that the desired size and dimension of first and second plurality of pincers 170, 182 may be a function of the relative rigidity and/or compression strength of the tablet. It is also contemplated that first and second pincers 170, 182 may engage and extend any distance along the outer radial wall of the tablet. The relative position of the tablet within interior 174 may affect the resulting shape and configuration of the jacket injection molded about the tablet. It is further contemplated that molding apparatus 160 may be configured to support more than one, e.g., two or more tablets, and injection mold jacket material around the two or more tablets via the same injection molding process.
In the molding methods, slots 42 and/or 120 (see
In accordance with the present disclosure, a method of manufacturing is disclosed for forming linkers 10, 100. Specifically, the method of manufacturing includes grasping, via a plurality of first pincers, a tablet, e.g., tablet 12 and/or 102, and positioning the preformed tablet with respect to a molding apparatus. The method also includes positioning the grasped tablet and at least a portion of the plurality of first pincers within a mold interior and injecting a polymer material around the tablet and the plurality of first pincers to form a jacket, e.g., jacket 20 and/or 114. The method further includes extracting the formed linker, e.g., tablet 12 surrounded by jacket 20, and disengaging the plurality of first pincers therefrom.
Referring to
Step 202 may include engaging tablet 12 and/or 102 with a first plurality of pincers. As described above with reference to
Step 204 may include maneuvering the grasped tablet 12 and/or 102 from a first position relatively remote from the mold walls to a second position relatively adjacent the mold walls. Specifically, step 204 may include positioning the tablet with respect to first end wall 166 and axis 175 as described above with reference to
Step 206 may include closing the mold walls with respect to the tablet. As described above, first and second side walls 162, 164 may move in direction A and interior 174 may be formed around the tablet and the first pincers. Interior 174 may be configured to produce the desired jacket, e.g., jacket 42 and/or 120, as shown in any one of
Step 208 may include injection molding the jacket around the tablet, as well as around the first plurality of pincers. Step 208 may include injecting jacket material into interior 174 and allowing the jacket material to flow into the space between inner surface 172 and the outer walls of the tablet via any injection molding process. Injection molding processes are well known in the art and, as such, are not further described. Because the first plurality of pincers are engaged with the tablet within interior 174, the portions of the tablet covered thereby may not be exposed to the jacket material injected during step 208.
Step 210 may include opening the mold walls with respect to the tablet. As described above, first and second side walls 162, 164 may move in direction A unsealing interior 174 and exposing the jacketed tablet.
Step 212 may include removing the tablet and jacket, i.e., a formed linker, with the first plurality of pincers. Specifically, step 208 may include maneuvering the formed linker to a location relatively remote of first end wall 166.
Step 214 may include disengaging the first plurality of pincers from the tablet and, thus, from the formed linker. It is contemplated that the first plurality of pincers may be disengaged or separated from the linker via any conventional manner, such as, for example, vibrating the pincers and/or the linker or axially pulling the pincers relative to the linker. As such, slots 42 and/or 120 may be formed on an end of the formed jacket as an artifact of the first plurality of pincers being disposed within interior 174 during step 208.
Method 300 may include positioning the tablet with the plurality of first pincers and engaging the tablet with a second plurality of pincers, step 304. Method 300 may also include injection molding a jacket around the tablet and the first and second plurality of pincers, step 308, so as to form a linker, i.e., linker 10 and/or 100. Method 300 may further include removing the tablet and jacket with the first plurality of pincers and disengaging the second plurality of pincers from the tablet, step 312. Steps 302, 306, 310, and 314 may be substantially similar to steps 202, 206, 210, and 214 as described above referencing
Step 304 may include maneuvering the grasped tablet 12 and/or 102 from a first position relatively remote from the mold walls to a second position relatively adjacent the mold walls. Specifically, step 204 may include positioning the tablet with respect to first end wall 166 and axis 175 as described above with reference to
Step 308 may include injection molding a jacket around the tablet and the first and second plurality of pincers. Specifically, step 308 may include injection molding jacket material around the first plurality of pincers as well as around the second plurality of pincers. Step 308 may include injecting jacket material into interior 174 and allowing the jacket material to flow into the space between inner surface 172 and the outer walls of the tablet via any injection molding process. Because the first plurality of pincers and the second pincers are engaged with the tablet and within interior 174, the portions of the tablet covered thereby may not be exposed to the jacket material injected during step 306.
Step 312 may include removing the tablet and jacket, i.e., a formed linker, from the mold and disengaging the second plurality of pincers from the tablet. Specifically, step 312 may include maneuvering the formed linker to a location relatively remote of first end wall 166. The second plurality of pincers may be fixed with respect to first end wall 166 and/or the first plurality of pincers and, thus, may be disengaged from the formed linker when the linker is maneuvered therefrom. As such, slots 42 and/or 120 may be formed on one end of the formed jacket as an artifact of the second plurality of pincers. It is contemplated that the second plurality of pincers may be separately controllable by an actuating mechanism and, as such, may be disengaged from the formed linker by the actuating mechanism.
Other embodiments of the invention will be apparent to those skilled in the art from consideration of the specification and practice of the invention disclosed herein. It is intended that the specification and examples be considered as exemplary only, with a true scope and spirit of the invention being indicated by the following claims.
This application claims priority to U.S. Provisional Patent Application No. 60/960,785 filed Oct. 15, 2007 and U.S. Provisional Patent Application No. 61/000,898 filed Oct. 30, 2007.
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