PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Overcoming the solubility crisis: a solvent-free method to enhance drug bioavailability

Researchers leverage the transition from solid to gas phase to produce drug formulations with high solubility

2026-01-30
(Press-News.org)

A large share of medicines developed today may never reach patients for a surprisingly simple reason: they cannot dissolve well enough in water. For most treatments, the oral route remains the gold standard because it is convenient and familiar. However, for a pill to work, its active ingredients must first dissolve in the fluids of the gastrointestinal tract before they can be absorbed into the bloodstream. If a drug dissolves too slowly or incompletely, its therapeutic effect can be compromised. This so-called ‘solubility crisis’ has become one of the main bottlenecks in modern drug development, affecting as much as 90% of active compounds currently under development.

To overcome this issue, pharmaceutical scientists often try to change the physical structure of drugs. Most drugs are naturally crystalline, meaning their molecules are arranged in a rigid arrangement that is difficult to break apart. Turning these crystals into an amorphous form, in which the molecules are disordered, is an effective way to increase drug solubility in water. In practice, this can be achieved via the evaporation/condensation (EV) method, where drug molecules are adsorbed onto porous materials like mesoporous silica (MPS) to prevent them from re-crystallizing. However, the EV method requires dissolving the drug in potent organic solvents first, raising health and environmental concerns.

Seeking a more sustainable alternative, a research team led by Professor Takehisa Hanawa from the Faculty of Pharmaceutical Sciences, Tokyo University of Science (TUS), Japan, investigated an organic solvent-free approach to load drugs into MPS. In their latest paper, made available online on December 24, 2025, and published in Volume 115, Issue 2 of the Journal of Pharmaceutical Sciences on February 1, 2026, the team dives into the sealed heating (SH) method, a process that bypasses liquid chemicals entirely by using the gas phase. This work was co-authored by Yayoi Kono, former Adjunct Lecturer at TUS and currently Professor at Nagoya City University; Kaori Hirose, former Adjunct Assistant Professor at TUS; Tomohiro Ozawa, former Adjunct Assistant Professor at TUS; Kazuya Nomura, 2021 Master's Program Graduate at TUS; and Mr. Nobuyuki Natori and Dr. Takuma Oba from the Formulation Department, CMC Center, Kaken Pharmaceutical Co., Ltd. 

In the SH method, a solid mixture of MPS and a drug in powder form is placed in a gently heated vacuum container. The drug must be able to transition directly from solid to gas under these conditions through a physical process known as ‘sublimation.’ Once in gaseous form, the drug molecules can adsorb onto the internal surfaces of the silica pores and remain in an amorphous state, boosting their solubility.

Using ibuprofen as a representative drug compound with sublimation properties, the researchers compared the SH approach with both simple physical mixing and the conventional EV method. They employed advanced analytical techniques to track changes in crystallinity, pore structure, and molecular interactions between the drug and MPS.

The results showed that SH was highly effective under the optimal conditions, matching the performance of EV-prepared samples. Ibuprofen adsorbed onto MPS became completely amorphous at low-to-moderate drug loadings, especially when silica with a larger pore volume was used. Most importantly, dissolution tests revealed that these optimal MPS formulations released ibuprofen 2.7 times faster than the original crystalline drug within the first 10 minutes. Chemical analyses also confirmed that the ibuprofen molecules remained intact and that no unwanted chemical reactions occurred with the MPS carrier.

Taken together, these findings position the SH method as a promising solution to the solubility crisis in drug development. Beyond performance, the environmental advantages of the approach also stand out, as Prof. Hanawa remarks, “The fact that pharmaceuticals can be loaded onto MPS directly via the gas phase makes the SH method an environmentally friendly and safe drug loading technique that does not require the use of organic solvents.” This solvent-free aspect could also simplify pharmaceutical manufacturing steps and reduce cost and regulatory burdens.

The research team also sees broader potential for this innovative technique. Because the process relies on physical adsorption rather than chemical bonding, it may be possible to load more than one drug onto the same carrier. “By further adsorbing other pharmaceuticals onto MPS carrier-based compounds, we believe the proposed method could also be used to manufacture combination drugs,” explains Prof. Hanawa. The proposed method could also be used in loading anti-inflammatory drugs such as para-hydroxybenzoic acids, mefenamic acid, etenzamide, flufenamic acid, and aspirin. Furthermore, this method could be utilized by companies handling porous materials and in MPS manufacturing units.

While the SH method is limited to drugs that can sublime, this study demonstrates a promising new direction for pharmaceutical technologies, offering a cleaner and simpler way of turning promising drug molecules into effective medicines in the near future.

 

 

***

 

 

Reference       
DOI: 10.1016/j.xphs.2025.104140          


About The Tokyo University of Science
Tokyo University of Science (TUS) is a well-known and respected university, and the largest science-specialized private research university in Japan, with four campuses in central Tokyo and its suburbs and in Hokkaido. Established in 1881, the university has continually contributed to Japan's development in science through inculcating the love for science in researchers, technicians, and educators.

With a mission of “Creating science and technology for the harmonious development of nature, human beings, and society," TUS has undertaken a wide range of research from basic to applied science. TUS has embraced a multidisciplinary approach to research and undertaken intensive study in some of today's most vital fields. TUS is a meritocracy where the best in science is recognized and nurtured. It is the only private university in Japan that has produced a Nobel Prize winner and the only private university in Asia to produce Nobel Prize winners within the natural sciences field.

Website: https://www.tus.ac.jp/en/mediarelations/
 

About Professor Takehisa Hanawa from Tokyo University of Science
Dr. Takehisa Hanawa obtained a PhD degree in Pharmaceutical Technology from Chiba University in 1991. He currently serves as Professor in the Faculty of Pharmaceutical Sciences, Department of Pharmacy at Tokyo University of Science. He specializes in medical pharmacy and pharmaceutical technologies, covering topics such as the development of patient-friendly formulations, advanced wound and oral mucositis healing formulations, and clarifying the molecular interaction between medical additives and drug molecules. He has published over 120 refereed papers on these topics and was featured as one of the Top Downloaded Authors of the Polymers for Advanced Technologies online journal in 2023.

END



ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Baby dinosaurs a common prey for Late Jurassic predators

2026-01-30
Babies and very young sauropods – the long-necked, long-tailed plant-eaters that in adulthood were the largest animals to have ever walked on land – were a key food sustaining predators in the Late Jurassic, according to a new study led by a UCL (University College London) researcher. The study, published in the New Mexico Museum of Natural History and Science Bulletin, used data from fossils laid down 150 million years ago in the Morrison Formation*, in the United States, to map out a “food web” of the time – a gigantic network of who ate what and who ate whom. The research team found that very young sauropods, relatively defenceless ...

Land-intensive carbon removal requires better siting to protect biodiversity

2026-01-30
The study, published in Nature Climate Change and led by scientists at the Potsdam Institute for Climate Impact Research (PIK) analysed future projections across five large-scale modelling projects, as well as considering 135,000 species and 70 biodiversity hotspots, to produce spatial mapping of where land-based carbon removal may be sited in the future. The authors’ approach allows for a risk–risk assessment, not only focusing on overlaps between biodiversity areas and land allocated to carbon dioxide removal (CDR), but also showing the positive impacts of ...

Devastation of island land snails, especially in the Pacific

2026-01-30
A comprehensive new review paper reveals the staggering loss of biodiversity among island land snails globally. Lead author Robert Cowie of the University of Hawai‘i at Mānoa’s School of Ocean and Earth Science and Technology (SOEST) and co-authors note that ‘devastation’ is not a hyperbolic term, pointing out that extinction rates on high volcanic islands commonly range from 30% to as high as 80%. The review was published recently in Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society B.  Tracking trends through the ‘shell bank’ While the review is global in scope, Cowie, along with Philippe Bouchet and Benoît ...

Microwaves help turn sugar industry waste into high-performance biochar

2026-01-30
Agricultural waste from the global sugar industry could become a powerful tool for clean energy, pollution control, and sustainable materials, thanks to new research showing how microwave technology can dramatically improve biochar production. In a study published in Sustainable Materials and Chemicals, researchers report that microwave-assisted pyrolysis can be precisely optimized to convert sugarcane bagasse, the fibrous residue left after sugar extraction, into highly porous biochar with exceptional surface ...

From craft dust to green gold: Turning palm handicraft waste into high value bio based chemicals

2026-01-30
Mannan rich palm handicraft waste, such as tagua nuts and bodhi roots, can be turned into valuable green chemicals instead of being burned or discarded, according to a new study. “In many parts of the world, polished palm seeds are carved into jewelry and religious beads, but the cutting and drilling leave behind piles of fine powder that usually end up as waste,” said first author Bin Hu of North China Electric Power University. “Our work shows that this overlooked by product can become a promising feedstock for clean chemical production.” The researchers examined two popular palm based handicraft materials: tagua nuts from Ecuador, sometimes called “vegetable ...

New roadmap shows how to turn farm nitrogen models into real world water quality gains

2026-01-30
“A lot of governments are spending serious money on farm conservation, yet the rivers are not getting cleaner as fast as people expect,” said lead author Yi Pan of Zhejiang University in China. “Our work shows that the problem is not that best management practices are useless. It is that our planning tools have been aiming at the wrong processes, the wrong places, and the wrong time scales for nitrogen.”​ The new review pulls together advances in hydrology, computer modeling, and social science to propose a practical optimization framework tailored specifically to agricultural nitrogen, one of the ...

Heart damage is common after an operation and often goes unnoticed, but patients who see a cardiologist may be less likely to die or suffer heart disease as a result

2026-01-30
An estimated 4.2 million people die within 30 days of surgery worldwide each year. A new study, published in the European Heart Journal [1] today (Thursday), suggests that deaths and serious heart disease might be prevented if some patients see a specialist heart doctor as part of their post-surgery care.   In this observational study, researchers studied a group of patients who had suffered heart damage during or immediately after non-cardiac surgery. A proportion were evaluated by a cardiologist, but the rest were not. Patients who saw a cardiologist were less likely ...

New tool exposes scale of fake research flooding cancer science

2026-01-30
A new machine learning tool has identified more than 250,000 cancer research papers that may have been produced by so-called “paper mills”. Developed by QUT researcher Professor Adrian Barnett, from the School of Public Health and Social Work and Australian Centre for Health Services and Innovation (AusHSI), and an international team of collaborators, the study, published in The BMJ, analysed 2.6 million cancer studies from 1999 to 2024. It found more than 250,000 papers with writing patterns similar to articles already retracted for suspected fabrication. “Paper mills are companies that sell fake or low-quality scientific studies. They are producing ‘research’ ...

Researchers identify new blood markers that may detect early pancreatic cancer

2026-01-30
For Immediate Release Friday, January 30, 2026   Contact: NIH Office of Communications   National Institutes of Health (NIH)-supported investigators have developed a blood test to find pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma, one of the deadliest forms of cancer. The new test could improve survival rates from pancreatic cancer, which tends to be diagnosed at late stages when therapy is less likely to be effective. The findings were published in Clinical Cancer Research.   Overall, only about 1 in 10 pancreatic cancer patients survive more than five years from diagnosis. However, experts expect that when ...

Scientists uncover why some brain cells resist Alzheimer's disease

2026-01-30
New research by UCLA Health and UC San Francisco has uncovered why certain brain cells are more resilient than others to the buildup of a toxic protein that is a hallmark of Alzheimer’s disease and related dementias, potentially leading to new targets for therapies or treatments. The study, published in the journal Cell, used a novel CRISPR-based genetic screening approach on lab-grown human brain cells to determine the cellular machinery that controls the accumulation of tau protein in the brain. These proteins can build up as toxic clumps in the brain, killing ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

MANA scientists enable near-frictionless motion of pico- to nanoliter droplets with liquid-repellent particle coating

Chung-Ang University scientists generate electricity using Tesla turbine-inspired structure

Overcoming the solubility crisis: a solvent-free method to enhance drug bioavailability

Baby dinosaurs a common prey for Late Jurassic predators

Land-intensive carbon removal requires better siting to protect biodiversity

Devastation of island land snails, especially in the Pacific

Microwaves help turn sugar industry waste into high-performance biochar

From craft dust to green gold: Turning palm handicraft waste into high value bio based chemicals

New roadmap shows how to turn farm nitrogen models into real world water quality gains

Heart damage is common after an operation and often goes unnoticed, but patients who see a cardiologist may be less likely to die or suffer heart disease as a result

New tool exposes scale of fake research flooding cancer science

Researchers identify new blood markers that may detect early pancreatic cancer

Scientists uncover why some brain cells resist Alzheimer's disease

The Lancet: AI-supported mammography screening results in fewer aggressive and advanced breast cancers, finds full results from first randomized controlled trial

New AI tool improves treatment of cancer patients after heart attack

Kandahar University highlights global disparities in neurosurgical workforce and access to care

Research spotlight: Discovering risk factors for long-term relapse in alcohol use disorder

As fossil fuel use declines, experts urge planning and coordination to prevent chaotic collapse

Scientists identify the antibody's hinge as a structural "control hub"

Late-breaking study establishes new risk model for surgery after TAVR

To reduce CO2 emissions, policy on carbon pricing, taxation and investment in renewable energy is key

Kissing the sun: Unraveling mysteries of the solar wind

Breathing new life into nanotubes for a cooler planet

Machine learning reveals how to maximize biochar yield from algae

Inconsistent standards may be undermining global tracking of antibiotic resistance

Helping hands: UBCO research team develops brace to reduce tremors

MXene nanomaterials enter a new dimension

Hippocampus does more than store memories: it predicts rewards, study finds

New light-based nanotechnology could enable more precise, less harmful cancer treatment

The heritability of human lifespan is roughly 50%, once external mortality is addressed

[Press-News.org] Overcoming the solubility crisis: a solvent-free method to enhance drug bioavailability
Researchers leverage the transition from solid to gas phase to produce drug formulations with high solubility