D. Hung, G. Mellick, R. Prankerd
Jul 16, 1997
Citations
1
Influential Citations
12
Citations
Journal
International Journal of Pharmaceutics
Abstract
O-Acyl esters were prepared from salicylic acid and diflunisal by esterification with the appropriate acyl anhydride (in the presence of sulfuric acid at 80°C) or acyl chloride (in the presence of pyridine at 0°C). Synthesis, identification and characterization of these compounds is described. In vitro hydrolysis, solubility and protein binding studies of these O-acyl esters were performed. For the diflunisal esters, the melting points fell as the side chain was increased from ethyl to pentyl. The melting points showed no significant difference as the length of the side chain was increased from pentyl to heptyl. The aspirin analogues showed a similar trend. The relationship between solubility and carbon chain length agreed closely with that for the melting points with carbon chain length. In vitro non-enzymatic hydrolysis studies concluded that: (1) hydrolysis rate constants generally decreased with carbon chain length; (2) the diflunisal esters have shorter half lives compared with their salicylate counterparts; and (3) the in vitro hydrolysis of these compounds was retarded by the presence of bovine serum albumin. Protein binding experiments showed that the strength of binding of the aspirin and diflunisal analogues to bovine serum albumin increased with carbon chain length.