Additive Manufacturing of Pharmaceutical Dosage Forms Containing Mesoporous Materials
This project is utilizes the additive manufacturing technique Fused Deposition Modeling (FDM) to produce novel, tailor-made oral dosage forms containing drug-loaded mesoporous materials. Oral dosage forms for drug delivery are commonly produced using tableting machines that can produce thousands of tablets in short periods of time, but in certain situations there are the requirements for specific drug loadings or dosage forms, for example in pediatrics. 3D printing techniques such as FDM offer the clinician the ability to rapidly produce specialized dosage forms on demand. With FDM, a filament comprised of the drug, a thermoplastic polymer and perhaps other excipients, is loaded into the FDM printer, see Figure 1. Different tablet sizes, geometries and infill patterns can be printed to produce a desired drug release behavior. Moreover, different tablet shapes and colors can be used to improve patient compliance, which can be beneficial within pediatric care.
A large proportion of newly developed drugs are poorly soluble in aqueous media, which presents a challenging problem in oral dosage form design since a drug that doesn’t sufficiently dissolve when taken orally may not reach the patient’s bloodstream in high enough concentrations to be therapeutically effective. It has been shown that incorporating poorly soluble drugs within the pores of mesoporous materials (i.e., materials with pores in the size range 2-50 nm) can prevent the drug from crystallizing, and consequently results in a higher apparent solubility and faster drug release compared to the crystalline form of the drug. In this project we incorporate drug loaded mesoporous materials within a filament that is subsequently printed into oral dosage forms using the FDM technique.


Project members
For more information please contact responsible researchers:
Christos Katsiotis and Ken Welch