Evaluation of pH Dependent Solubility and Examination of Variation in Pharmacokinetic Properties of Alectinib: A Quantitative Study by Implementing Integrated Quality by Design Approach for RP-HPLC Method Development and Optimization
Document Type
Article
Publication Title
Indian Journal of Pharmaceutical Education and Research
Abstract
Introduction: Alectinib, an anaplastic lymphoma kinase inhibitor of BCS class IV, is said to have pH-dependent solubility and is susceptible to interactions with co-prescribed acid-reducing agents. Objectives: A micro-dissolution study was performed to determine the effect of modulations in gastrointestinal pH using biorelevant media and a sensitive RP-HPLC technique was developed for quantification of alectinib in the same using quality by design approach. Materials and Methods: Analytical method was developed and optimized in accordance with box-behnken design followed by micro-dissolution experiment mimicking physiological pH shift. Results: The solubility of alectinib in FaSSGF decreased from 0.648 µg/ml to 0.270 µg/ml whereas in FaSSIF it dropped down from 0.574 µg/ml to 0.108 µg/ml at the end of the micro-dissolution experiment. This reveals that elevation of pH from 1.2 to 6.8 has no significant impact on its solubility and hence will not influence drug absorption. Conclusion: Nonetheless, the study would be useful for therapeutic medication monitoring, dose adjustment of co-administered drugs, proactively driving clinical research design, and obtaining a readout on pH liability for high-risk anticancer medications.
First Page
1219
Last Page
1225
DOI
10.5530/ijper.56.4.203
Publication Date
10-1-2022
Recommended Citation
Kolasani, Durga Deepthi; Desai, Mrunal; Patil, Prajakta; and Jagadish, Puralae Channabasavaiah, "Evaluation of pH Dependent Solubility and Examination of Variation in Pharmacokinetic Properties of Alectinib: A Quantitative Study by Implementing Integrated Quality by Design Approach for RP-HPLC Method Development and Optimization" (2022). Open Access archive. 3916.
https://impressions.manipal.edu/open-access-archive/3916