Stability Flashcards

1
Q

Why is stability testing important?

A
  • Medicines degrade over time, affecting safety and efficacy.
    • Determines shelf life (how long a product remains safe).
      Expiry date = end of shelf life.
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2
Q

Factors affecting stability

A
  1. Temperature
  2. Chemical Stability
  3. Light & Oxygen
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3
Q

How does temperature affect stability

A
  • Increased temperature = faster degradation.
    • Cold storage (2–8°C) slows degradation.
    • Freezing (< -15°C) can harm some drugs (e.g., amoxicillin in solution).
      Transport & storage risks: exposure to high temperatures.
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4
Q

Chemical stability

A
  • Hydrolysis (reaction with water) – prevented by replacing water with another solvent.
    • Solvent choice: Consider toxicity & compatibility.
    • Solid forms are generally more stable than liquid forms.
      pH sensitivity: Some drugs degrade faster at acidic or basic pH.
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5
Q

Catalysis and pH effects

A
  • Catalysts speed up degradation (H₃O⁺, OH⁻, buffer ions).
    • Example: Phosphate & acetate catalyse chloramphenicol hydrolysis.
    • Use borate buffer instead (non-catalytic).
      pH affects ionisation, changing degradation rates.
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6
Q

How does light & oxygen affect stability

A
  • Photodegradation – prevented using tinted/opaque packaging.
    • Oxidation – prevented by:
      ○ Flushing with inert gas (N₂, Ar).
      ○ Antioxidants (e.g., ascorbic acid, α-tocopherol).
      Chelating agents (e.g., EDTA) to bind metal ions (Cu²⁺, Fe³⁺) that catalyse oxidation.
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7
Q

Physical Stability & Stress testing

A
  1. Liquid dosage forms
  2. Sorption and container effects
  3. Preformulation & Stress testing
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8
Q

Liquid dosage forms testing

A
  • Solutions: Risk of precipitation (reduces efficacy, poor appearance).
    • Suspensions: Risk of caking, particle growth (leads to inaccurate doses & grittiness).
    • Emulsions & creams: Risk of:
      ○ Creaming, cracking (phase separation).
      Loss of viscosity (affects application).
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9
Q

Sorption & Container Effects

A
  • Sorption = adsorption + absorption.
    • Non-polar drugs can stick to plastics & rubber (e.g., diazepam).
    • Volatile components lost to rubber lids.
      pH affects sorption (unionised form sorbs more).
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10
Q

Performulation & Stress Testing

A
  • Identifies stability issues early (e.g., oxidation, hydrolysis).
    • High-temperature storage accelerates degradation.
    • Uses Arrhenius Equation to predict stability at room temperature.
    • Limitations:
      ○ Different degradation reactions may occur at high temp.
      ○ Unreliable for precise shelf-life predictions.
      Temperature cycling (freeze-thaw) tests effects on emulsions, suspensions, solutions.
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11
Q

Long term stability testing

A

Real storage conditions over at least 12 months
Test for:
* Drug & excipient stability
* pH, microbial contamination, physical properties
Accelerated testing under raised temperature and humidity to detect problems faster

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12
Q

Climatic zones

A
  • Testing conditions vary by region (e.g., hotter/humid climates need special testing).
    Packaging matters – should be the same as the final product.
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13
Q

Testing protocols

A
  • At least 3 batches tested.
    • Liquid formulations stored inverted (to test cap interaction).
    • Sampling intervals:
      ○ Every 3 months (year 1).
      ○ Every 6 months (year 2).
      ○ Annually after that.
      Control humidity unless irrelevant (e.g., aqueous solutions in glass).
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14
Q

Assessments for liquid dosage forms

A
  • Solutions: Precipitation, clarity, pH, viscosity, microbial contamination.
    • Suspensions: Dispersibility, rheological properties, particle size.
      Emulsions: Phase separation, droplet size.
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15
Q

Evaluation of results

A
  • Set specifications for acceptable degradation (usually >90% drug remains).
    • Aesthetic properties (appearance, smell, taste) must be acceptable.
    • Shelf life = shortest time from tested batches.
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16
Q

Summary of product testing - stability

A
  • Chemical, physical, and microbiological degradation impact medicine performance.
    • Stability testing ensures efficacy & sets shelf-life.
    • Formulation adjustments (e.g., buffers, antioxidants, packaging) improve stability.
      Regulatory protocols require extensive testing (preformulation, stress, and long-term studies).