{Reference Type}: Journal Article {Title}: Excipient-Induced Lattice Disorder in Active Pharmaceutical Ingredient: Implications on Drug Product Continuous Manufacturing. {Author}: Munjal B;DeBoyace K;Cao F;Krzyzaniak JF;Arora KK;Suryanarayanan R; {Journal}: Mol Pharm {Volume}: 0 {Issue}: 0 {Year}: 2024 Aug 13 {Factor}: 5.364 {DOI}: 10.1021/acs.molpharmaceut.4c00529 {Abstract}: Our previous work (Mol Pharm, 20 (2023) 3427) showed that crystalline excipients, specifically anhydrous dibasic calcium phosphate (DCPA), facilitated the dehydration of carbamazepine dihydrate (CBZDH) and the formation of an amorphous product phase during the mixing stage of continuous tablet manufacturing. Understanding the mechanism of this excipient-induced effect was the object of this study. Blending with DCPA for 15 min caused pronounced lattice disorder in CBZDH. This was evident from the 190% increase in the apparent lattice strain determined by the Williamson-Hall plot. The rapid dehydration was attributed to the increased reactivity of CBZDH caused by this lattice disorder. Lattice disorder in CBZDH was induced by a second method, cryomilling it with DCPA. The dehydration was accelerated in the milled sample. Annealing the cryomilled sample reversed the effect, thus confirming the effect of lattice disorder on the dehydration kinetics. The hardness of DCPA appeared to be responsible for the disordering effect. DCPA exhibited a similar effect in other hydrates, thereby revealing that the effect was not unique to CBZDH. However, its magnitude varied on a case-by-case basis. The high shear powder mixing was necessary for rapid and efficient powder mixing during continuous drug product manufacturing. The mechanical stress imposed on the CBZDH, and exacerbated by DCPA, caused this unexpected destabilization.