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2021 ◽  
Vol 11 (1) ◽  
pp. 61-70
Author(s):  
Malesh Prajapati ◽  
Dilip Bhagwan Yamgar ◽  
Mayur Narayan Desale ◽  
Bharti Fegade

Etoricoxib belongs to the class of highly selective COX-2 inhibitor NSAIDs. It is mostly used for the treatment of pain, arthritic conditions including rheumatoid arthritis and osteoarthritis. The current study focuses primarily on analytical and bioanalytical method development methodologies, as well as numerous methods established for the estimation of etoricoxib, whether in pharmaceutical dose form or in bulk. Analytical procedures are critical for determining compositions, as they allow us to obtain both qualitative and quantitative results utilising advanced analytical tools. The analytical method for Etoricoxib may be chromatographic, electrochemical, spectral or hyphenated.  These methods aid in the comprehension of critical process parameters as well as the minimization of their impact on precision and accuracy. Analytical method development is required to sustain high commercial product quality standards and to meet regulatory requirements. Following the reference, regulatory organisations in several nations have established standards and procedures for providing approval, authentication, and registration. Bioanalytical methods are designed to quantify the concentration of drug, metabolite, or typical biomarkers from various biological fluids including serum, urine, saliva and tissue extracts.


2021 ◽  
Vol 9 ◽  
Author(s):  
Liwen Zhang ◽  
Yan Hu ◽  
Panpan Pan ◽  
Chengtao Hong ◽  
Luo Fang

Objectives: To estimate the frequency of manipulations of all tablets and capsules prescribed for children in a teaching and tertiary children's hospital in China over the course of 1 month. Moreover, hypothetical reduction of manipulation according to the availability of low-strength tablets/capsules licensed by the Chinese National Medical Products Administration (CNMPA) was evaluated.Methods: Information on all tablets and capsules prescribed in the hospital from March 17 to April 16, 2019 was collected. It was assumed that tablets or capsules were manipulated if the prescribed dose would have required only a proportion of the intact dose form. Manipulation typically includes splitting or crushing tablets, opening capsules and dispersing in water, or combinations of these method. Moreover, we defined an “avoidable manipulation,” when the dose could be rounded and/or when alternative products with a reduced strength or in liquid formulation were available in the hospital, and a “inappropriate manipulation,” which involved manipulated medications with a direct contraindication for any manipulation, such as those with a narrow therapeutic index or hazardous ingredients, or modified release dosage-forms. The frequencies of total, avoidable, and inappropriate manipulation were estimated, along with the hypothetical reduction of manipulation according to the availability of CNMPA-approved drug doses.Results: A total of 17,123 prescriptions for 142 medications were identified to have required a manipulation among 78,366 prescriptions administered during the study period, with 43 different proportions of subdivisions, ranging from a 19/20 to 1/180 product strength reduction. Half, quarter, and trisection were the most common subdivisions administered. Overall, 19% of the manipulated prescriptions were determined to be avoidable, and 19% of the manipulations involved medications with a clear recommendation to not manipulate. In addition, 21% of the manipulated prescriptions could have been potentially avoided if all of the approved preparations with the lowest strength would have been available at the hospital. Any manipulations undertaken were carried out by pharmacists and family care givers.Conclusions: More than 20% of tablets and capsules prescriptions need manipulated, included a high incidence of avoidable and inappropriate manipulation.


2021 ◽  
Vol 37 (4) ◽  
pp. 900-904
Author(s):  
Narayan Shrivas ◽  
S. K. Mishra

Using RP-HPLC, an accurate and precise technique for the measurement of Temozolomide in its pharmaceutical dose form was developed and validated. Chromatographic separation was achieved on an X Terra RP 18(250mm x 4.6mm), 5 µ column using a mobile phase consisting of methanol and buffer in the ratio of 10:990v/v. The flow rate was 1mL/min with the detection wavelength of 254 nm and retention time was found to be 20 min. The developed method was validated according to ICH guidelines. With a correlation coefficient of 0.9990, linearity was observed in the range of 50-150 percent. The %RSD of the developed method for method precision and Intermediate precision was found to be 0.65 % and 0.59 % respectively. With a percent recovery of 99.82 ±0.045, the approach was confirmed to be reliable. All of the validation parameters yielded results that were within acceptable limits. It was discovered that the procedure was accurate, exact, specific, rugged, and durable. As a result, the newly discovered approach can be used for finish product of quality control and stability testing on a regular basis and it has been confirmed to be stable for Temozolomide is available in both pure and pharmaceutical dose forms.


2021 ◽  
Vol 10 (3) ◽  
pp. 2977-2981
Author(s):  
Prashant L Pingale ◽  

The basic concept of FDT is the incorporation of superdisintegrants, which promotes breakdown of tablet quickly when kept or positioned on the tongue, allowing the drug to be released into the saliva. The rate of absorption is regulated by the solubility of the medication. The faster the dosage form of the medication dissolves in solution, the faster the therapeutic action is absorbed and initiated. In FDT, a medicine or dose form should dissolve or disintegrate in the saliva within 60 seconds. The objective of this research work is to formulate a Pravastatin tablet that disintegrated quickly using natural disintegrants. As a diluent, we employed microcrystalline cellulose. Synthetic superdisintegrant such as crospovidone and croscarmellose sodium were used, they were replaced with natural superdisintegrant. In this study, natural superdisintegrant dehydrated banana powder were used synthetic superdisintegrants viz. croscarmellose sodium, crospovidone. A Natural superdisintegrant was used in this formulation at concentrations of 2, 4, 6 and 8% of total weight of tablet i.e. 4, 8, 12 and 15 mg respectively in 200 mg tablet. According to the data, the tablet formulation containing 6% banana powder (i.e., 12 mg per tablet, formulation code FB4) showed a faster and higher drug release of 97.75% during the in-vitro dissolution investigation.


Author(s):  
Pauline Frizelle ◽  
Anna-Kaisa Tolonen ◽  
Josie Tulip ◽  
Carol-Anne Murphy ◽  
David Saldana ◽  
...  

Purpose The aim of this study was to extract key learning from intervention studies in which qualitative aspects of dosage, dose form , have been examined for children with developmental language disorder (DLD)—in vocabulary, morphosyntax, and phonology domains. This research paper emerged from a pair of systematic reviews, aiming to synthesize available evidence regarding qualitative and quantitative aspects of dosage. While quantitative aspects had been experimentally manipulated, the available evidence for dose form (tasks or activities within which teaching episodes are delivered) was less definitive. Despite this, the review uncovered insights of value to DLD research. Method A preregistered systematic review (PROSPERO ID: CRD42017076663) adhering to Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analyses (PRISMA) guidelines was completed. Included papers were quasi-experimental, randomized controlled trial, or cohort analytic studies, published in any language between January 2006 and May 2019; oral language interventions with vocabulary, morphosyntax, or phonology outcomes; and participants with DLD ( M = 3–18 years). The intention was to include papers in which dose form was experimentally manipulated or statistically analyzed, while quantitative dosage aspects were controlled, such that definitive conclusions about optimal dose form could be drawn and gaps in the evidence identified. Results Two hundred and twenty-four papers met the above inclusion criteria; 27 focused on dose form . No study controlled for all quantitative aspects of dosage such that we could effectively address our original research questions. Despite this, key points of learning emerged with implications for future research. Conclusions There is tentative evidence of advantages for explicit over implicit instruction and of the benefits of variability in input, elicited production, and gestural and other visual supports. With careful design of dose form, there is potential to design more efficient interventions. Speech-language pathology research would benefit from an agreed taxonomy of dose form components and standardized reporting of intervention studies, to enable cross-study comparisons and a systematic accrual of knowledge to identify optimal dose form for clinical application.


2021 ◽  
Vol 39 (3_suppl) ◽  
pp. 401-401
Author(s):  
Arjun Gupta ◽  
Naveen Premnath ◽  
Muhammad Shaalan Beg ◽  
Rohan Khera ◽  
Stacie Dusetzina

401 Background: Pancreatic enzyme replacement therapy (PERT) can reduce symptoms of indigestion and improve nutrition in patients with exocrine pancreatic insufficiency. PERT is under-prescribed, and this may be related to actual costs and prescriber sensitivity to these costs. Thus, we aimed to assess PERT costs. Methods: We used Medicare Part D formulary and pricing files for the first quarter of 2020 to conduct a patient-level modeling study to describe point-of-sale and out-of-pocket costs for each PERT formulation among Part D stand-alone and Medicare Advantage prescription drug plans. We calculated costs across nationwide plans under three scenarios: (1) standard benefit design ($435 deductible and 25% coinsurance after the deductible is met); (2) 25% coinsurance (for fills after the deductible and in the coverage gap until the patient spends $6,350 out-of-pocket); and (3) 5% coinsurance (once catastrophic coverage is reached). PERT doses are identified by the lipase content per capsule (in United States Pharmacopeia, USP, units). We calculated the number of units for each PERT formulation/ dose form that would provide optimally dosed PERT for the average US adult (250,000 USP units of lipase per day), based on guidelines and consensus. We first calculated costs for a single unit of PERT. Next, we calculated the number of units needed daily for each formulation/ dose form to provide optimally dosed PERT, and multiplied it by 30 to generate 30-day requirements and costs. Results: Across 3,974 plans nationwide, five PERT formulations in seventeen different doses were covered by Medicare plans in 2020. The range of lipase content in a single unit ranged from 3,000 to 40,000 USP units, and the per-unit list price ranged from $1.44 to $13.89. The point-of-sale price for a 30-day supply of optimally dosed PERT ranged from $2,109 to $4,840. For patients, the expected out-of-pocket costs for a 30-day supply of optimally dosed PERT averaged $999 across formulations (range, $853 to $1536) for those paying a deductible and coinsurance, $673 (range, $527 to $1210) for fills made after meeting the deductible until reaching catastrophic coverage, and $135 (range, $105 to $242) after reaching catastrophic coverage. Conclusions: In this analysis of 2020 Medicare Part D plans, the estimated out-of-pocket cost for just a 30-day supply of optimally dosed PERT was high— at least $100 in the catastrophic phase and approximately $1,000 in the initial phase. In the setting of pancreas cancer, already associated with heavy symptom burden and distress, the financial burden from a supportive care intervention (such as PERT) has been underappreciated. These costs may serve as a barrier to Medicare beneficiary drug access and contribute to financial toxicity.


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