University of Leicester
Browse

Virtual screening of drug materials for pharmaceutical tablet manufacturability with reference to sticking

journal contribution
posted on 2024-10-30, 10:09 authored by Ahmad Ramahi, Vishal Shinde, Tim Pearce, Csaba Sinka

The manufacturing of pharmaceutical solid dosage forms, such as tablets involves a large number of successive processing operations including crystallisation of the drug substance, granulation, drying, milling, mixing of the formulation, and compaction. Each step is fraught with manufacturing problems. Undesired adhesion of powders to the surface of the compaction tooling, known as sticking, is a frequent and highly disruptive problem that occurs at the very end of the process chain when the tablet is formed. As an alternative to the mechanistic approaches to address sticking, we introduce two different machine learning strategies to predict sticking directly from the chemical formula of the drug substance, represented by molecular descriptors. An empirical database for sticking behaviour was developed and used to train the machine learning (ML) algorithms to predict sticking properties from molecular descriptors. The ML model has successfully classified sticking/non-sticking behaviour of powders with 100% separation. Predictions were made for materials in the handbook of Pharmaceutical Excipients and a subset of molecules included in the ChemBL database, demonstrating the potential use of machine learning approaches to screen for sticking propensity early at drug discovery and development stages. This is the first-time molecular descriptors and machine learning were used to predict and screen for sticking behaviour. The method has potential to transform the development of medicines by providing manufacturability information at drug screening stage and is potentially applicable to other manufacturing problems controlled by the chemistry of the drug substance.

History

Author affiliation

College of Science & Engineering Engineering

Version

  • AM (Accepted Manuscript)

Published in

International Journal of Pharmaceutics

Pagination

124722 - 124722

Publisher

Elsevier BV

issn

0378-5173

eissn

1873-3476

Copyright date

2024

Available date

2025-09-16

Spatial coverage

Netherlands

Language

en

Deposited by

Dr Timothy Pearce

Deposit date

2024-10-27

Usage metrics

    University of Leicester Publications

    Exports

    RefWorks
    BibTeX
    Ref. manager
    Endnote
    DataCite
    NLM
    DC