July 28 - July 29 2005
The Ritz Carlton Philadelphia



Hydrolysis and the Stabilization of Pharmaceuticals - Preventing and Dealing with Hydrolytic Reactions

 

PHILADELPHIA - The Hydrolysis and Stabilization Conference is part of IIR's Stability Series which includes such topics as oxidative degradation, excipients, impurities, forced degradation, and photostability. The aim of the hydrolysis arm of the series is to go more in-depth in the areas of moisture activity, water processing, humidity, the environment and forced degradation. We are pleased to announce the following companies are members of our distinguished speaking faculty: Center for Pharmaceutical Physics, Colorcon, Eli Lilly, Hoffmann-La Roche, Merck & Company, Pfizer Pharmaceuticals, Quintiles, Inc., Spectral Dimensions, Sud-Chemie Performance Packaging, and the University of the Sciences in Philadelphia.

 

The first day of the conference is dedicated to defining the problem, gaining a better understanding of hydrolysis, and increasing the physical stability of your drug product. The day opens with a brief course taught by the University of the Sciences in Philadelphia reviewing the basic information of hydrolysis, the role of pH, buffer components and ionic strength, hydrolysis of acidic, basic and neutral drugs, case studies of specific groups including ester, amide and b-lactam hydrolysis, and hydrolysis in polymers and proteins. Speakers address creating the best possible formulations, surface acidity, and the use of predictive models to produce optimal drug candidates with key learnings from compounds with hydrolytic issues.

 

The second day of the conference is dedicated to increasing the physical stability of your drug product and provides ways to prevent and deal hydrolytic reactions. A case study is presented on Merck's novel approach for moisture measurement in solid dosage. This session serves as an introduction to moisture activity and the speaker discusses the limitations of traditional moisture measurement approaches and methods to measure moisture activity. Other topic areas being discussed include headspace inside pharmaceutical packaging, near infrared chemical imaging, desiccants, film coating, and lyophilization.

 

Throughout the conference we hope to explore all considerations of hydrolysis in the development of a new drug product. Please register early as we expect this event to sell out. We look forward to greeting you from July 28-29 in Philadelphia!