posted on 2021-10-27, 10:12authored byKevin M. Moroney, Michael Vynnycky
Understanding drug release from pharmaceutical granules is vital to the development of
targeted release profiles. A model describing diffusion and solubility-limited drug dissolu tion and release from a porous spherical granule of drug and excipient is considered. Ra dially varying porosity and initial concentration profiles which can arise in pharmaceutical
granules are incorporated. A range of boundary-value and moving-boundary-value prob lems arise, depending on the relationship between the drug saturation concentration in
the solvent medium and the initial drug concentration and porosity profiles. The model
is derived in detail for the case where the initial drug concentration is greater than the
drug saturation concentration in all parts of the granule. In this case, a moving bound ary forms at the granule surface and propagates inwards, separating an unextracted in ner core from a shell region which undergoes extraction via diffusion. The full model is
non-dimensionalised and analysed using asymptotic methods and numerical solution. A
leading-order model is derived by exploiting a small parameter corresponding to the ratio
of the drug saturation concentration to the maximum initial concentration in the gran ule, allowing estimation of the time taken for the moving boundary to reach the granule
centre. The behaviour of the full model is considered by solving it using a boundary immo bilisation method and the finite element method for a range of parameters and comparing
to the leading-order model. Finally, the model outputs for the moving boundary position
and normalised drug release are compared with experimental data from the literature.