Abstract
Hydroflumethiazide was spray-dried with polyvinylpyrrolidone (PVP) to produce products containing 0–30% PVP. These systems were amorphous and differed from previously prepared coprecipitates of similar composition. Differential scanning calorimetry (DSC) suggested that at low PVP weight fractions both amorphous drug and an amorphous drug-PVP complex can be present in spray-dried systems. The apparent solubility of hydroflumethiazide in spray-dried products increased with increasing PVP content reaching a plateau value approximately four times that of the pure crystalline drug. The estimated free energy and entropy of the spray-dried drug were greater than that of crystalline drug and also increased with increasing PVP content. Dissolution studies with compressed discs supported the apparent solubility data. The results suggest that amorphous phases having different orders of organization are formed in spray-dried systems with increasing PVP content.