US3576663A - Coated tablet - Google Patents

Coated tablet Download PDF

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US3576663A
US3576663A US3576663DA US3576663A US 3576663 A US3576663 A US 3576663A US 3576663D A US3576663D A US 3576663DA US 3576663 A US3576663 A US 3576663A
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Prior art keywords
shellac
ounces
coating
suspension
tablet
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Charles A Signorino
Thomas E Jamison
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Colorcon Inc
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Colorcon Inc
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Classifications

    • AHUMAN NECESSITIES
    • A61MEDICAL OR VETERINARY SCIENCE; HYGIENE
    • A61KPREPARATIONS FOR MEDICAL, DENTAL OR TOILETRY PURPOSES
    • A61K9/00Medicinal preparations characterised by special physical form
    • A61K9/20Pills, tablets, discs, rods
    • A61K9/28Dragees; Coated pills or tablets, e.g. with film or compression coating
    • AHUMAN NECESSITIES
    • A61MEDICAL OR VETERINARY SCIENCE; HYGIENE
    • A61JCONTAINERS SPECIALLY ADAPTED FOR MEDICAL OR PHARMACEUTICAL PURPOSES; DEVICES OR METHODS SPECIALLY ADAPTED FOR BRINGING PHARMACEUTICAL PRODUCTS INTO PARTICULAR PHYSICAL OR ADMINISTERING FORMS; DEVICES FOR ADMINISTERING FOOD OR MEDICINES ORALLY; BABY COMFORTERS; DEVICES FOR RECEIVING SPITTLE
    • A61J3/00Devices or methods specially adapted for bringing pharmaceutical products into particular physical or administering forms
    • A61J3/005Coating of tablets or the like
    • AHUMAN NECESSITIES
    • A61MEDICAL OR VETERINARY SCIENCE; HYGIENE
    • A61KPREPARATIONS FOR MEDICAL, DENTAL OR TOILETRY PURPOSES
    • A61K9/00Medicinal preparations characterised by special physical form
    • A61K9/20Pills, tablets, discs, rods
    • A61K9/28Dragees; Coated pills or tablets, e.g. with film or compression coating
    • A61K9/2886Dragees; Coated pills or tablets, e.g. with film or compression coating having two or more different drug-free coatings; Tablets of the type inert core-drug layer-inactive layer
    • YGENERAL TAGGING OF NEW TECHNOLOGICAL DEVELOPMENTS; GENERAL TAGGING OF CROSS-SECTIONAL TECHNOLOGIES SPANNING OVER SEVERAL SECTIONS OF THE IPC; TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC CROSS-REFERENCE ART COLLECTIONS [XRACs] AND DIGESTS
    • Y10TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC
    • Y10TTECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER US CLASSIFICATION
    • Y10T428/00Stock material or miscellaneous articles
    • Y10T428/31504Composite [nonstructural laminate]
    • Y10T428/31725Of polyamide
    • Y10T428/31768Natural source-type polyamide [e.g., casein, gelatin, etc.]
    • YGENERAL TAGGING OF NEW TECHNOLOGICAL DEVELOPMENTS; GENERAL TAGGING OF CROSS-SECTIONAL TECHNOLOGIES SPANNING OVER SEVERAL SECTIONS OF THE IPC; TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC CROSS-REFERENCE ART COLLECTIONS [XRACs] AND DIGESTS
    • Y10TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC
    • Y10TTECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER US CLASSIFICATION
    • Y10T428/00Stock material or miscellaneous articles
    • Y10T428/31504Composite [nonstructural laminate]
    • Y10T428/31844Of natural gum, rosin, natural oil or lac
    • YGENERAL TAGGING OF NEW TECHNOLOGICAL DEVELOPMENTS; GENERAL TAGGING OF CROSS-SECTIONAL TECHNOLOGIES SPANNING OVER SEVERAL SECTIONS OF THE IPC; TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC CROSS-REFERENCE ART COLLECTIONS [XRACs] AND DIGESTS
    • Y10TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC
    • Y10TTECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER US CLASSIFICATION
    • Y10T428/00Stock material or miscellaneous articles
    • Y10T428/31504Composite [nonstructural laminate]
    • Y10T428/31971Of carbohydrate

Definitions

  • Tablets are commonly coated with a layer of sugar, but even when the sugar solution contains opaque color pigments, the compressed tablet core requires subcoating with sucrose and dusting powders to get a rounded form.
  • the tablet core also requires a coating or layer of sealant to protect the core against moisture.
  • Compressed tablet cores may be sealed against moisture by coating them directly with a film such as with methyl cellulose.
  • a film such as with methyl cellulose.
  • direct film coating requires elaborate spray and exhaust systems. This is true of most of the useful synthetic polymers, since they are not adapted to coating by ladling into a coating pan containing the tablet cores and then rotating the pan.
  • Shellac is widely used as a sealing coating on tablet cores, and also as a finish coating, if it does not matter that the tablets have a mottled or uneven appearance.
  • Shellac has the advantages of being an excellent moisture barrier, and of being adaptable to being applied to the tablet cores by ladling onto the tablet cores in a rotatable coating pan.
  • shellac has several disadvantages.
  • the shellac coats after the first one do not distribute color well.
  • the shellac film is not smooth because the subsequent layers of shellac activate those already deposited and cause a picking between tablets that transfers the shellac from one tablet to another and gives an orange peel eflfect and a general uneveness in color as well as pin holes in the film layer.
  • the process of the invention permits ladling an anhydrous suspension, such as a shellac suspension, directly on tablet cores rolling in a coating pan.
  • compressed tablet cores are screened to remove dust, and are deposited in a rotatable coating pan.
  • a sufiicient quantity of a shellac color suspension is applied to thoroughly wet the tumbling tablet cores. After the suspension is uniformly distributed about the cores for about 1 minute, warm air is applied to the tablets while they are still rolling until the tablet cores start to break loose from each other and become less tacky. The warm air is applied to the rolling tablets for about 4 minutes. Then the pan is stopped and is intermittently jogged every minute for about 10 minutes. The jogging comprises rotating the coating pan for /2 revolution so as not to let the coated cores in the pan and adhere to each other.
  • this first coating is sufficiently dry to take a second coating.
  • This second coating may be another coating, one-half the volume, of the shellac suspension if a double sealing layer of shellac is desired.
  • the second shellac layer is more tacky than the first shellac layer, but this tackiness is not a serious problem.
  • sugar syrup as the second coating.
  • the sugar coating may be applied by ladling plain sugar syrup into the coating pan onto the tablet cores, and rolling the sugar layer dry in about 5 minutes.
  • a sugar suspension of 10 to 25-pound cut, preferably a 16-22-pound cut, of sucrose syrup is formed into a sugar suspension by adding 1 to 5 percent by weight of a shellac suspension.
  • 10 to 25- pound cut sucrose syrup is meant 10 to 25 pounds of sugar dissolved in one gallon water.
  • This sugar suspension containing the small amount of shellac suspension has the advantage of etching or softening the previous shellac layer slightly to form a better or more secure bond of the sugar coating to the shellac coating. Since the shellac suspension is colored, its addition to the sugar suspension gives color to the sugar suspension and therefore the sugar coating aids in adding color instead of just forming a colorless base for the next color application.
  • the sugar suspension aids in developing the color of the tablet more rapidly.
  • the sugar layer adheres well to the first layer of shellac and provides a flat, non-tacky surface for a third coating layer which may be of shellac.
  • a layer of shellac is applied to form the third coating layer.
  • This third layer is applied by ladling a sufficient amount of shellac suspension onto the tablet cores to Wet them completely, then rolling the tablet cores until they break free from each other, then jogging the coating pan every minute for about 10 minutes to dry the tablet cores.
  • This procedure of applying alternate coating layers of shellac and sugar may be continued until the desired full color of the tablet is achieved.
  • the anhydrous suspension may comprise a shellac coating suspension including, by weight, 30 parts of 4 pound cut shellac (4 pounds of shellac dissolved in a gallon of alcohol), 3 parts of slip and levelling agents, 25 parts of pigment solids, and ethyl alcohol, denatured.
  • the shellac suspension may include 2 parts of polyvinylpyrrolidone.
  • the slip and levelling agents may be in the range of about -6 parts, the pigment solids -30 parts, and the polyvinylpyrrolidone O-S parts.
  • the slip agents are included in the shellac suspension in order to chemically reduce the tacking of the shellac so that the tablet cores slip by instead of picking.
  • the slip agents may include cetyl alcohol, glycol monostearate, and talc.
  • the levelling agents are included in order to help spread the shellac suspension evenly over the tablet cores.
  • the levelling agents may include sorbitan monooleate, and sorbitan monostearate.
  • Acetylated monoglyceride may be included in the shellac coating suspension as both a levelling and a slip agent.
  • the polyvinylpyrrolidone is included in the shellac suspension to reduce the tendency of the shellac to polymerize and to modify the shellac film to help stabilize it.
  • the pigment solids may include all the FD & C and D & C lakes, soluble and insoluble dyes, opacifiers, titanium dioxide, calcium carbonate, silica, iron oxides and channel black formulated to desired color.
  • the pigment solids include FD & C Red No. 3, FD & C Violet No. 1, talc and titanium dioxide.
  • the alcohol may be a specially denatured alcohol such as 3A ethyl alcohol, denatured, and it is used in sufiicient quantity to give viscosity of the shell-ac suspension of to 30 seconds in a No. 3 Zahn cup at 25 C.
  • 3A ethyl alcohol denatured
  • the sugar syrup may comprise, by weight, 14 parts of sucrose, and 6 parts of water. If desired, 1 part of the shellac suspension may be added to the sugar syrup to produce the sugar suspension.
  • 14 pounds of 3-gr-ain scored placebos are loaded into a 16 inch spherical coating pan. Then 175 milliliters of the shellac suspension are ladled over the rolling tablet cores and after the suspension is throroughly distributed, air at 100 F. is directed onto the tablet cores to dry them to the extent that they separate from each other. Then the coating pan is jogged for /2 revolution every minute for about 10 minutes while still directing the air onto the tablets to further dry the tablets.
  • the shellac suspension may be diluted with milliliters of 3A ethyl alcohol and ladled onto the tablets in the coating pan.
  • This diluted shellac suspension may be used so as not to get too much shellac on the tablet core, and to spread the diluted shellac suspension uniformly over all the tablets since the diluted suspension is thinner and easier flowing.
  • EXAMPLE 1 Ingredients Amounts 4 pound cut bleached shellac 11 pounds, 14 ounces. Cetyl alcohol 3%. ounces. Isopropyl alcohol 4 pounds, 2 /2 ounces. Sorbitan monooleate 5 ounces. Sorbitan trioleate 5 ounces.
  • Titanium dioxide 9 pounds, 9 ounces.
  • Polyvrnylpyrrolidone 3 ounces.
  • the tablets are coated by alternately applying a layer of a shellac suspension and a layer of sugar suspension to the tablet cores, drying one layer before applying the next layer.
  • the suspensions are applied by ladling them onto the tablet cores being rotated in a coating pan, and this procedure is repeated as often as necessary to obtain the desired coloring and depth of film coating.
  • Example 2 The shellac suspension of Example 2 is applied to the tablet cores in the same manner as previously described.
  • EXAMPLE 3 Ingredients: Amounts 4 pound cut bleached shellac 4 pounds, 6 /2 ounces. Cetyl alcohol 1% ounces. Isopropyl alcohol 1 pound, ounce. Sorbitan monooleate 2 ounces. Sorbitan trioleate 2 ounces. FD & C Red No. 2 Lake 1 pound. Titanium dioxide '6 ounces.
  • EXAMPLE 4 Ingredients: Amounts 4 pound cut unbleached shellac 5 pounds, 12 ounces. Sorbitan monooleate 6 /6 ounces. Acetylated monoglyceride ounce. Polyvinylpyrrolidone 4 /2 ounces.
  • the flat non-tacky finish of the sugar layer lessens the incidence of tablet-to-tablet picking, thereby avoiding the orange peel eifect of uneven color distribution. Also, the sugar coatings aid in disintegrating the film coatings of the tablet after the tablet has been swallowed by a patient.
  • the color development of the tablet cores coated in accordance with the invention is more rapid and mottle free than conventional tablets because the shellac films or layers build up uniformly without being redistributed through picking. Without the intervening sugar layers, the shellac layers would build unevenly because of picking between tablets.
  • a tablet comprising a core, alternate layers of dried tacky material and dried non-tacky material covering the core, said dried tacky material consisting essentially of shellac, zein or gum arabic, and said non-tacky material consisting essentially of sugar.
  • said dried tacky material includes, in parts by weight, about 30 parts of shellac, 3 parts of slip and levelling agents, and parts of pigment solids.
  • said dried tacky layer includes the following ingredients and ratios by weight: 5 pounds, 12 ounces of 4 pound cut unbleached shellac, 6% ounces sorbitan rnonooleate, ounce acetylated monoglyceride, 4 /2 ounces of polyvinylpyrrolidone, 12 /2 ounces FD & C Violet No. 1 Lake, 1 pound, 10 /2 ounces titanium dioxide, and 10 ounces talc.
  • said dried tacky layer includes the following ingredients and ratios by weight: 11 pounds, 14 ounces of 4 pound cut bleached shellac, 3 /2 ounces cetyl alcohol, 5 ounces sorbitan rnonooleate, 5 ounces sorbitan trioleate, 2 pounds, 13 ounces FD & C Yellow No. 5 Lake, 15% ounces FD & C Blue No. 1 Lake, 9 pounds, 9 ounces titanium dioxide, 2 pounds, 8 /2 ounces talc, and 3 ounces polyvinylpyrrolidone.
  • said dried tacky layer includes the following ingredients and ratios by weight: 11 pounds, 14 ounces of 4 pound cut bleached shellac, 3 /2 ounces cetyl alcohol, 5 ounces sorbitan rnonooleate, 5 ounces sorbitan trioleate, 2 pounds, 15% ounces FD & C Yellow No. 5 Lake, 1 pound, 2 /2 ounces titanium dioxide, 1 pound, 13% ounces talc, and 7 /2 ounces polyvinylpyrrolidone.
  • said dried tacky layer includes the following ingredients and ratios by weight: 4 pounds, 6 /2 ounces of 4 pound cut bleached shellac, 1% ounces cetyl alcohol, 2 ounces sorbitan rnonooleate, 2 ounces sorbitan trioleate, 1 pound FD & C Red No. 2 Lake, 6 ounces titanium dioxide, 10 ounces talc, and 4 ounces polyvinylpyrrolidone.
  • the tablet of claim 9 wherein the coloring agent is FD & C and D & C lakes, soluble and insoluble dyes, iron oxides, channel black or opacifiers.

Abstract

COATED TABLETS WITH ALTERNATE LAYERS MADE FROM A LIQUID SUSPENSION OF TACKY MATERIAL AND THE OTHER LAYERS MADE FROM AN AQUEOUS SUSPENSION OF NON-TACKY MATERIAL WHEREIN THE TACKY MATERIAL IS SHELLAC, ZEIN OR GUM ARABIC AND THE NON-TACKY MATERIAL IS SUGAR.

Description

United States Patent 3,576,663 COATED TABLET Charles A. Signorino, King of Prussia, and Thomas E.
Jamison, Philadelphia, Pa., assignors to Color-con Incorporated, West Point, Pa.
No Drawing. Original application May 29, 1967, Ser. No. 642,190, now Patent No. 3,524,756, dated Aug. 18, 1970. Divided and this application Dec. 18, 1969, Ser. No. 886,348
Int. Cl. A61k 9/ 00; B4411 N14 US. Cl. 117-72 Claims ABSTRACT OF THE DISCLOSURE Coated tablets with alternate layers made from a liquid suspension of tacky material and the other layer made from an aqueous suspension of non-tacky material wherein the tacky material is shellac, zein or gum arabic and the non-tacky material is sugar.
CROSS REFERENCE TO RELATED PATENT This patent application is a division of patent application Ser. No. 642,190, filed May 29, 1967, now US. Pat. 3,524,756.
BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION One of the most important problems in the pharmaceutical industry has been the preparation of dosage forms which are safe and do not disintegrate or change while on the shelf, and which disintegrate as planned in the stomach or intestines when taken by the patient. Among the most popular and useful dosage forms being prepared today are coated tablets.
Tablets are commonly coated with a layer of sugar, but even when the sugar solution contains opaque color pigments, the compressed tablet core requires subcoating with sucrose and dusting powders to get a rounded form. The tablet core also requires a coating or layer of sealant to protect the core against moisture.
Compressed tablet cores may be sealed against moisture by coating them directly with a film such as with methyl cellulose. However, such direct film coating requires elaborate spray and exhaust systems. This is true of most of the useful synthetic polymers, since they are not adapted to coating by ladling into a coating pan containing the tablet cores and then rotating the pan.
Shellac is widely used as a sealing coating on tablet cores, and also as a finish coating, if it does not matter that the tablets have a mottled or uneven appearance. Shellac has the advantages of being an excellent moisture barrier, and of being adaptable to being applied to the tablet cores by ladling onto the tablet cores in a rotatable coating pan.
However, shellac has several disadvantages. The shellac coats after the first one do not distribute color well. Moreover, the shellac film is not smooth because the subsequent layers of shellac activate those already deposited and cause a picking between tablets that transfers the shellac from one tablet to another and gives an orange peel eflfect and a general uneveness in color as well as pin holes in the film layer.
Another disadvantage of shellac coatings on tablets is the tendency of the shellac to polymerize upon standing on the shelf. This causes the disintegration time of the tablet to be extended so that the tablet may not disintegrate in he stomach as intended, or in the intestines, but may pass through the body without disintegrating at all.
"ice
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION Accordingly, it is an object of this invention to provide a process for coating tablets with film so as to seal the tablet core against moisture and to overcome the problems of tackiness, mottling, uneveness of film coating and color, disintegration or change in characteristics while the tablets are on the shelf, and failure of the tablets to disintegrate in the body.
It is another object to provide a process for coating tablets With shellac that eliminates the tacking and intercoat picking problems usually associated with the application of shellac layers to pharmaceutical tablets.
It is another object to provide a tablet coating process which takes less time than conventional processes.
It is another object to provide a tablet which is sealed against moisture and has an even coating of film and color.
DESCRIPTION OF THE PREFERRED EMBODIMENTS The process of the invention permits ladling an anhydrous suspension, such as a shellac suspension, directly on tablet cores rolling in a coating pan.
In accordance with the process, compressed tablet cores are screened to remove dust, and are deposited in a rotatable coating pan. A sufiicient quantity of a shellac color suspension is applied to thoroughly wet the tumbling tablet cores. After the suspension is uniformly distributed about the cores for about 1 minute, warm air is applied to the tablets while they are still rolling until the tablet cores start to break loose from each other and become less tacky. The warm air is applied to the rolling tablets for about 4 minutes. Then the pan is stopped and is intermittently jogged every minute for about 10 minutes. The jogging comprises rotating the coating pan for /2 revolution so as not to let the coated cores in the pan and adhere to each other.
After about 10 minutes of this jogging, this first coating is sufficiently dry to take a second coating. This second coating may be another coating, one-half the volume, of the shellac suspension if a double sealing layer of shellac is desired. The second shellac layer is more tacky than the first shellac layer, but this tackiness is not a serious problem.
Instead of applying a second coating of shellac immediately, it is preferred to apply sugar syrup as the second coating. The sugar coating may be applied by ladling plain sugar syrup into the coating pan onto the tablet cores, and rolling the sugar layer dry in about 5 minutes.
Instead of plain sugar syrup, a sugar suspension of 10 to 25-pound cut, preferably a 16-22-pound cut, of sucrose syrup is formed into a sugar suspension by adding 1 to 5 percent by weight of a shellac suspension. By 10 to 25- pound cut sucrose syrup is meant 10 to 25 pounds of sugar dissolved in one gallon water. This sugar suspension containing the small amount of shellac suspension has the advantage of etching or softening the previous shellac layer slightly to form a better or more secure bond of the sugar coating to the shellac coating. Since the shellac suspension is colored, its addition to the sugar suspension gives color to the sugar suspension and therefore the sugar coating aids in adding color instead of just forming a colorless base for the next color application.
The sugar suspension aids in developing the color of the tablet more rapidly. The sugar layer adheres well to the first layer of shellac and provides a flat, non-tacky surface for a third coating layer which may be of shellac.
After the sugar is dried in the second coating layer, a layer of shellac is applied to form the third coating layer. This third layer is applied by ladling a sufficient amount of shellac suspension onto the tablet cores to Wet them completely, then rolling the tablet cores until they break free from each other, then jogging the coating pan every minute for about 10 minutes to dry the tablet cores.
This procedure of applying alternate coating layers of shellac and sugar may be continued until the desired full color of the tablet is achieved.
Advantageously, the anhydrous suspension may comprise a shellac coating suspension including, by weight, 30 parts of 4 pound cut shellac (4 pounds of shellac dissolved in a gallon of alcohol), 3 parts of slip and levelling agents, 25 parts of pigment solids, and ethyl alcohol, denatured. Also, the shellac suspension may include 2 parts of polyvinylpyrrolidone. The slip and levelling agents may be in the range of about -6 parts, the pigment solids -30 parts, and the polyvinylpyrrolidone O-S parts.
The slip agents are included in the shellac suspension in order to chemically reduce the tacking of the shellac so that the tablet cores slip by instead of picking. The slip agents may include cetyl alcohol, glycol monostearate, and talc.
The levelling agents are included in order to help spread the shellac suspension evenly over the tablet cores. The levelling agents may include sorbitan monooleate, and sorbitan monostearate. Acetylated monoglyceride may be included in the shellac coating suspension as both a levelling and a slip agent.
The polyvinylpyrrolidone is included in the shellac suspension to reduce the tendency of the shellac to polymerize and to modify the shellac film to help stabilize it.
The pigment solids may include all the FD & C and D & C lakes, soluble and insoluble dyes, opacifiers, titanium dioxide, calcium carbonate, silica, iron oxides and channel black formulated to desired color.
For example, to obtain a tablet having a dark cherry red color, the pigment solids include FD & C Red No. 3, FD & C Violet No. 1, talc and titanium dioxide.
The alcohol may be a specially denatured alcohol such as 3A ethyl alcohol, denatured, and it is used in sufiicient quantity to give aviscosity of the shell-ac suspension of to 30 seconds in a No. 3 Zahn cup at 25 C.
The sugar syrup may comprise, by weight, 14 parts of sucrose, and 6 parts of water. If desired, 1 part of the shellac suspension may be added to the sugar syrup to produce the sugar suspension.
In practicing the process of the invention, 14 pounds of 3-gr-ain scored placebos are loaded into a 16 inch spherical coating pan. Then 175 milliliters of the shellac suspension are ladled over the rolling tablet cores and after the suspension is throroughly distributed, air at 100 F. is directed onto the tablet cores to dry them to the extent that they separate from each other. Then the coating pan is jogged for /2 revolution every minute for about 10 minutes while still directing the air onto the tablets to further dry the tablets.
If a second sealing coat is necessary before the aqueous coating can be applied, then 60 milliliters of the shellac suspension may be diluted with milliliters of 3A ethyl alcohol and ladled onto the tablets in the coating pan. This diluted shellac suspension may be used so as not to get too much shellac on the tablet core, and to spread the diluted shellac suspension uniformly over all the tablets since the diluted suspension is thinner and easier flowing.
Next, 5O milliliters of the sugar suspension is added and is allowed to distribute evenly and is dried with air in about 4 minutes. This step can follow the first shellac coating directly if a good first coat is applied or the cores are not excessively sensitive to moisture.
Then 80 milliliters of the shellac suspension diluted by alcohol in the ratio of 3 parts of the shellac suspension to 1 part of alcohol is added and forms a coating over the sugar coating. This shellac coating is dried with air. A good fiat, non-tacky, uniform layer of colored shellac is obtained and this may complete the tablet coating if desired,
If additional coating is desired, after about 12 minutes, 45 milliliters of the sugar suspension is added and is dried with cool air. Then milliliters of the 3 to 1 diluted shellac suspension is added and the tablets are rolled dry with air without picking. A good uniform film of shellac and color is observed on the tablets.
Then 15 milliliters of the shellac suspension diluted with 15 milliliters of alcohol are added after about 10 minutes to get a more complete shellac finishing layer and to get a polished finish rather than a flat coating on the outside of the tablet. A very thin film is obtained so as to avoid any picking between tablets.
After standing 20 days, such coated tablets disintegrate in 5 minutes in simulated gastric fluid. After six months in storage the disintegration time was still 5 minutes in simulated gastric fluid.
To further illustrate the invention, the following examples of specific shellac suspensions will make obvious to one skilled in the art the practice of the invention.
EXAMPLE 1 Ingredients Amounts 4 pound cut bleached shellac 11 pounds, 14 ounces. Cetyl alcohol 3%. ounces. Isopropyl alcohol 4 pounds, 2 /2 ounces. Sorbitan monooleate 5 ounces. Sorbitan trioleate 5 ounces.
FD & C Yellow No. 5 Lake 2 pounds, 13 ounces.
FD & C Blue No. 1 Lake 15% ounces.
Titanium dioxide 9 pounds, 9 ounces. Talc 2 pounds, 8 /2 ounces. Polyvrnylpyrrolidone 3 ounces.
The tablets are coated by alternately applying a layer of a shellac suspension and a layer of sugar suspension to the tablet cores, drying one layer before applying the next layer. The suspensions are applied by ladling them onto the tablet cores being rotated in a coating pan, and this procedure is repeated as often as necessary to obtain the desired coloring and depth of film coating.
The shellac suspension of Example 2 is applied to the tablet cores in the same manner as previously described.
Other examples of specific shellac suspensions are as follows.
EXAMPLE 3 Ingredients: Amounts 4 pound cut bleached shellac 4 pounds, 6 /2 ounces. Cetyl alcohol 1% ounces. Isopropyl alcohol 1 pound, ounce. Sorbitan monooleate 2 ounces. Sorbitan trioleate 2 ounces. FD & C Red No. 2 Lake 1 pound. Titanium dioxide '6 ounces.
Talc 10 ounces.
Polyvinylpyrrolidone 4 ounces.
EXAMPLE 4 Ingredients: Amounts 4 pound cut unbleached shellac 5 pounds, 12 ounces. Sorbitan monooleate 6 /6 ounces. Acetylated monoglyceride ounce. Polyvinylpyrrolidone 4 /2 ounces.
12 /2 ounces.
1 pound, /2 ounces. 10 ounces.
1 pound.
FD & C Violet No. 1 Lake Titanium dioxide Talc Ethyl alcohol, denatured applied thereto. The flat non-tacky finish of the sugar layer lessens the incidence of tablet-to-tablet picking, thereby avoiding the orange peel eifect of uneven color distribution. Also, the sugar coatings aid in disintegrating the film coatings of the tablet after the tablet has been swallowed by a patient.
The color development of the tablet cores coated in accordance with the invention is more rapid and mottle free than conventional tablets because the shellac films or layers build up uniformly without being redistributed through picking. Without the intervening sugar layers, the shellac layers would build unevenly because of picking between tablets.
Also, the use of sugar coating layers between applications of the shellac suspension makes the coating operation much more simple. The attention of the coating operator is not as critical since dusting is unnecessary, and each new application of shellac goes on the tablet core with the ease of the first application.
We claim:
1. A tablet comprising a core, alternate layers of dried tacky material and dried non-tacky material covering the core, said dried tacky material consisting essentially of shellac, zein or gum arabic, and said non-tacky material consisting essentially of sugar.
2. The tablet of claim 1 wherein said dried tacky material also includes slip and levelling agents, and pigment solids.
3. The tablet of claim 1 wherein said dried tacky material includes, in parts by weight, about 30 parts of shellac, 3 parts of slip and levelling agents, and parts of pigment solids.
4. The tablet of claim 1 wherein said dried tacky layer also includes a minor proportion of polyvinylpyrrolidone.
5. The tablet of claim 1 wherein said dried tacky layer includes the following ingredients and ratios by weight: 5 pounds, 12 ounces of 4 pound cut unbleached shellac, 6% ounces sorbitan rnonooleate, ounce acetylated monoglyceride, 4 /2 ounces of polyvinylpyrrolidone, 12 /2 ounces FD & C Violet No. 1 Lake, 1 pound, 10 /2 ounces titanium dioxide, and 10 ounces talc.
6. The tablet of claim 1 wherein said dried tacky layer includes the following ingredients and ratios by weight: 11 pounds, 14 ounces of 4 pound cut bleached shellac, 3 /2 ounces cetyl alcohol, 5 ounces sorbitan rnonooleate, 5 ounces sorbitan trioleate, 2 pounds, 13 ounces FD & C Yellow No. 5 Lake, 15% ounces FD & C Blue No. 1 Lake, 9 pounds, 9 ounces titanium dioxide, 2 pounds, 8 /2 ounces talc, and 3 ounces polyvinylpyrrolidone.
7. The tablet of claim 1 wherein said dried tacky layer includes the following ingredients and ratios by weight: 11 pounds, 14 ounces of 4 pound cut bleached shellac, 3 /2 ounces cetyl alcohol, 5 ounces sorbitan rnonooleate, 5 ounces sorbitan trioleate, 2 pounds, 15% ounces FD & C Yellow No. 5 Lake, 1 pound, 2 /2 ounces titanium dioxide, 1 pound, 13% ounces talc, and 7 /2 ounces polyvinylpyrrolidone.
8. The tablet of claim 1 wherein said dried tacky layer includes the following ingredients and ratios by weight: 4 pounds, 6 /2 ounces of 4 pound cut bleached shellac, 1% ounces cetyl alcohol, 2 ounces sorbitan rnonooleate, 2 ounces sorbitan trioleate, 1 pound FD & C Red No. 2 Lake, 6 ounces titanium dioxide, 10 ounces talc, and 4 ounces polyvinylpyrrolidone.
9. The tablet of claim 1 wherein said dried tacky layer is colored with a coloring agent.
10. The tablet of claim 9 wherein the coloring agent is FD & C and D & C lakes, soluble and insoluble dyes, iron oxides, channel black or opacifiers.
References Cited UNITED STATES PATENTS 2,865,810 12/1958 Sanders 117--12X 2,982,234 5/1961 Ackley et al. 1l7-l2X 3,015,609 1/1962 Sanders 11712X 3,015,610 1/1962 Sanders 424-34X 3,159,544 12/1964 Heflernan et al 1l7l2X WILLIAM D. MARTIN, Primary Examiner R. HUSACK, Assistant Examiner US. 01. X.R.
99 134; 117 s1, s4, 91, 100, 109; 424-33, 34, 3s, 36
US3576663D 1967-05-29 1969-12-18 Coated tablet Expired - Lifetime US3576663A (en)

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Cited By (23)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US3939259A (en) * 1974-05-24 1976-02-17 Anthony Pescetti Coating composition and therapeutic preparation incorporating same
US4001390A (en) * 1974-04-04 1977-01-04 Shin-Etsu Chemical Co., Ltd. Method of coating pharmaceutical solid dosage forms
US4274830A (en) * 1977-09-27 1981-06-23 Colorcon, Inc. Colored medicinal tablet, natural color pigment and method for using the pigment in coloring food, drug and cosmetic products
US4336244A (en) * 1977-09-27 1982-06-22 Colorcon, Inc. Colored medicinal tablet, natural color pigment and method for using the pigment in coloring food, drug and cosmetic products
US4370377A (en) * 1980-07-01 1983-01-25 Koninklijke Emballage Industrie Van Leer B.V. Metallized labels for containers
WO1984003201A1 (en) * 1983-02-18 1984-08-30 Wrigley W M Jun Co Shellac encapsulant for active ingredients in chewing gum
US4543370A (en) * 1979-11-29 1985-09-24 Colorcon, Inc. Dry edible film coating composition, method and coating form
US4652313A (en) * 1984-10-24 1987-03-24 Crompton And Knowles Corporation Aqueous lake pigment suspension
US4661359A (en) * 1985-06-03 1987-04-28 General Mills, Inc. Compositions and methods for preparing an edible film of lower water vapor permeability
US4710228A (en) * 1985-10-16 1987-12-01 General Mills, Inc. Edible coating composition and method of preparation
US4874618A (en) * 1985-12-27 1989-10-17 General Mills, Inc. Package containing a moisture resistant edible internal barrier
US5112625A (en) * 1989-02-15 1992-05-12 Wm. Wrigley Jr. Company Aqueous zein coated sweeteners and other ingredients for chewing gum
US5192563A (en) * 1986-10-22 1993-03-09 Wm. Wrigley, Jr. Company Strongly mint-flavored chewing gums with reduced bitterness and harshness
US5662936A (en) * 1993-12-23 1997-09-02 Akzo Nobel, N.V. Sugar-coated pharmaceutical dosage unit
WO1997033485A1 (en) * 1996-03-14 1997-09-18 Wm. Wrigley Jr. Company Chewing gum containing gum talha
US5952019A (en) * 1996-03-14 1999-09-14 Wm. Wrigley Jr. Company Chewing gum containing gum talha
US6123848A (en) * 1997-02-14 2000-09-26 Warner-Jenkinson Company, Inc. Ultrafiltration method for purifying water-insoluble aluminum hydrates
US6432448B1 (en) 1999-02-08 2002-08-13 Fmc Corporation Edible coating composition
US20030059614A1 (en) * 1989-09-20 2003-03-27 Hani Sadek Enrobed core medicament
US20030129238A1 (en) * 1999-10-29 2003-07-10 Michael Augello Edible MCC/PGA coating composition
US6699315B2 (en) 2000-11-28 2004-03-02 Fmc Corporation Edible PGA coating composition
US6723342B1 (en) 1999-02-08 2004-04-20 Fmc Corporation Edible coating composition
US20050095272A1 (en) * 2000-11-28 2005-05-05 Fmc Corporation Edible PGA coating composition

Cited By (25)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US4001390A (en) * 1974-04-04 1977-01-04 Shin-Etsu Chemical Co., Ltd. Method of coating pharmaceutical solid dosage forms
US3939259A (en) * 1974-05-24 1976-02-17 Anthony Pescetti Coating composition and therapeutic preparation incorporating same
US4274830A (en) * 1977-09-27 1981-06-23 Colorcon, Inc. Colored medicinal tablet, natural color pigment and method for using the pigment in coloring food, drug and cosmetic products
US4336244A (en) * 1977-09-27 1982-06-22 Colorcon, Inc. Colored medicinal tablet, natural color pigment and method for using the pigment in coloring food, drug and cosmetic products
US4543370A (en) * 1979-11-29 1985-09-24 Colorcon, Inc. Dry edible film coating composition, method and coating form
US4370377A (en) * 1980-07-01 1983-01-25 Koninklijke Emballage Industrie Van Leer B.V. Metallized labels for containers
WO1984003201A1 (en) * 1983-02-18 1984-08-30 Wrigley W M Jun Co Shellac encapsulant for active ingredients in chewing gum
US4652313A (en) * 1984-10-24 1987-03-24 Crompton And Knowles Corporation Aqueous lake pigment suspension
US4661359A (en) * 1985-06-03 1987-04-28 General Mills, Inc. Compositions and methods for preparing an edible film of lower water vapor permeability
US4710228A (en) * 1985-10-16 1987-12-01 General Mills, Inc. Edible coating composition and method of preparation
US4874618A (en) * 1985-12-27 1989-10-17 General Mills, Inc. Package containing a moisture resistant edible internal barrier
US5192563A (en) * 1986-10-22 1993-03-09 Wm. Wrigley, Jr. Company Strongly mint-flavored chewing gums with reduced bitterness and harshness
US5112625A (en) * 1989-02-15 1992-05-12 Wm. Wrigley Jr. Company Aqueous zein coated sweeteners and other ingredients for chewing gum
US20030059614A1 (en) * 1989-09-20 2003-03-27 Hani Sadek Enrobed core medicament
WO1993011673A1 (en) * 1991-12-17 1993-06-24 Wm. Wrigley Jr. Company Strongly mint-flavored chewing gums with reduced bitterness and harshness
US5662936A (en) * 1993-12-23 1997-09-02 Akzo Nobel, N.V. Sugar-coated pharmaceutical dosage unit
WO1997033485A1 (en) * 1996-03-14 1997-09-18 Wm. Wrigley Jr. Company Chewing gum containing gum talha
US5952019A (en) * 1996-03-14 1999-09-14 Wm. Wrigley Jr. Company Chewing gum containing gum talha
US6123848A (en) * 1997-02-14 2000-09-26 Warner-Jenkinson Company, Inc. Ultrafiltration method for purifying water-insoluble aluminum hydrates
US6432448B1 (en) 1999-02-08 2002-08-13 Fmc Corporation Edible coating composition
US6723342B1 (en) 1999-02-08 2004-04-20 Fmc Corporation Edible coating composition
US20030129238A1 (en) * 1999-10-29 2003-07-10 Michael Augello Edible MCC/PGA coating composition
US6699315B2 (en) 2000-11-28 2004-03-02 Fmc Corporation Edible PGA coating composition
US20050095272A1 (en) * 2000-11-28 2005-05-05 Fmc Corporation Edible PGA coating composition
US6932861B2 (en) 2000-11-28 2005-08-23 Fmc Corporation Edible PGA coating composition

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