Salts, solvates and hydrates of the multi-kinase inhibitor drug pazopanib with hydroxybenzoic acids†
Abstract
The marketed formulation of pazopanib (PAZ) suffers from low and variable bioavailability because of its poor dissolution rate and photostability issues. The drug falls under Biopharmaceutics Classification System (BCS) class II of low solubility and good permeability. The hydrogen bonds and supramolecular interactions in crystalline forms of PAZ with hydroxybenzoic acids (HBAs) and dihydroxybenzoic acids (DHBAs), as well as its salts are analyzed. Ten X-ray crystal structures of PAZ which include the reference drug, a tetrahydrofuran solvate (PAZ·THF) and eight salts with HBAs/DHBAs are reported. There is proton transfer from the carboxylic group of the coformer acid to the most basic nitrogen atom of the 2-aminopyrimidine ring of PAZ in all cases. Two salts were crystallized in neat form, while the remaining six are solvates and hydrates. The crystal structure of PAZ is stabilized by sulfonamide and 2-aminopyrimidine homosynthons of N–H⋯O and N–H⋯N hydrogen bonds in an R22(8) ring motif. PAZ·HBA/DHBA salts consistently contain the aminopyridinium⋯carboxylate N+–H⋯O− synthon of the R22(8) ring. The sulfonamide homosynthon of PAZ is disrupted in preference to the formation of N–H⋯O and N–H⋯N hydrogen bonds in salt structures. The presence of an additional basic nitrogen atom in the indazole ring of PAZ promotes hydration and solvation through the O–H⋯N hydrogen bond. Whereas the formation of salts is desirable for pharmaceutical formulation, the inclusion of adventitious solvent and/or water molecules with hydroxybenzoic acid coformers in the cocrystal-salt products is a limitation for this class of coformers. The stability problem faced with hydrates and solvates of PAZ·HBA/DHBA salts means that their formation must be carried out by strictly anhydrous procedures. The consistent occurrence of the aminopyridinium⋯carboxylate N+–H⋯O− ring synthon is discussed in relation to the previous results of Aakeröy, Nangia and Zaworotko groups on similar acid–base multi-component systems.
- This article is part of the themed collections: Introducing the CrystEngComm Advisory Board and their research and Crystal Engineering Techniques