Sodium lauryl sulfate as lubricant in tablets formulations: Is it worth?

Int J Pharm. 2023 Aug 25:643:123265. doi: 10.1016/j.ijpharm.2023.123265. Epub 2023 Jul 22.

Abstract

Lubricants are excipients used in tablet formulations to reduce friction and adhesion forces within the die or on the punches surface during the manufacturing process. Despite these excipients are always required for the tablets production, their amount must be carefully evaluated since lubricants can negatively impact on mechanical strength, disintegration and dissolution behavior of solid dosage forms. Alternative compounds have been suggested to overcome the issues of conventional lubricants and sodium lauryl sulfate (SDS) is one of the most promising one. Despite SDS has been object of several investigations, a definitive conclusion on its effectiveness cannot still be drawn. Particularly, its efficacy on tablets disaggregation and API dissolution is still unclear. Here, the effect of SDS on all the relevant features of tablets and tableting process has been evaluated on immediate release hydrophobic tablets formulations in comparison with conventional lubricants. The results of this investigation are quite outspoken: SDS has a low lubricant power while it determines only a limited improvement on tablets hardness. It greatly improves the tablets wettability but only on model formulations, the presence of superdisintegrants resets its effectiveness and any possible effect on tablets disaggregation. None of the tested formulations showed improvement on the API dissolution rate.

Keywords: Contact angle; Drug release; Lubrication; Magnesium stearate; Sodium Stearyl Fumarate; Sodium dodecyl sulfate.

MeSH terms

  • Drug Compounding
  • Excipients* / chemistry
  • Lubricants* / chemistry
  • Sodium Dodecyl Sulfate / chemistry
  • Stearic Acids / chemistry

Substances

  • Sodium Dodecyl Sulfate
  • Lubricants
  • Excipients
  • Stearic Acids