Role of genetic algorithms and artificial neural networks in predicting the phase behavior of colloidal delivery systems

Pharm Res. 2001 Jul;18(7):1049-55. doi: 10.1023/a:1010913017092.

Abstract

Purpose: A genetic neural network (GNN) model was developed to predict the phase behavior of microemulsion (ME), lamellar liquid crystal (LC), and coarse emulsion forming systems (W/O EM and O/W EM) depending on the content of separate components in the system and cosurfactant nature.

Method: Eight pseudoternary phase triangles, containing ethyl oleate as the oil component and a mixture of two nonionic surfactants and n-alcohol or 1,2-alkanediol as a cosurfactant, were constructed and used for training, testing, and validation purposes. A total of 21 molecular descriptors were calculated for each cosurfactant. A genetic algorithm was used to select important molecular descriptors, and a supervised artificial neural network with two hidden layers was used to correlate selected descriptors and the weight ratio of components in the system with the observed phase behavior.

Results: The results proved the dominant role of the chemical composition, hydrophile-lipophile balance, length of hydrocarbon chain, molecular volume, and hydrocarbon volume of cosurfactant. The best GNN model, with 14 inputs and two hidden layers with 14 and 9 neurons, predicted the phase behavior for a new set of cosurfactants with 82.2% accuracy for ME, 87.5% for LC, 83.3% for the O/W EM, and 91.5% for the W/O EM region.

Conclusions: This type of methodology can be applied in the evaluation of the cosurfactants for pharmaceutical formulations to minimize experimental effort.

Publication types

  • Validation Study

MeSH terms

  • Algorithms*
  • Chemistry, Pharmaceutical
  • Colloids* / chemistry
  • Colloids* / pharmacokinetics
  • Drug Delivery Systems* / methods
  • Models, Genetic*
  • Neural Networks, Computer*
  • Predictive Value of Tests
  • Surface-Active Agents / chemistry
  • Surface-Active Agents / pharmacokinetics

Substances

  • Colloids
  • Surface-Active Agents