Viraj Kulthe a++*, Rauf Pathan and Amit Raj Sinha b
a SIGACHI® Industries Limited, Dahej SEZ, Bharuch, Gujarat, India.
b SIGACHI® Industries Limited, 4th Floor, Kalayan’s Tulsiram Chambers, Madinaguda,
Hyderabad, Telangana, India.
Authors’ contributions
This work was carried out in collaboration among all authors. Author VK conceptualized and
supervised the study. Author RP performed experimental work wrote the manuscript. Author ARS
analyzed the data and reviewed the manuscript. All authors read and approved the final manuscript.
Article Information
DOI: https://doi.org/10.9734/jpri/2025/v37i117772
Open Peer Review History:
This journal follows the Advanced Open Peer Review policy. Identity of the Reviewers, Editor(s) and additional Reviewers, peer
review comments, different versions of the manuscript, comments of the editors, etc are available here:
https://pr.sdiarticle5.com/review-history/146485
_____________________________________________________________________________________________________
++ Senior Manager;
*Corresponding author: E-mail: viraj.kulthe@sigachi.com;
Cite as: Viraj Kulthe, Rauf Pathan, and Amit Raj Sinha. 2025. “Formulation and in-Vitro Evaluation of Extended Release
Metformin Hydrochloride Directly Compressible Tablets by Using ULTRAMODTM Polymer Premix”. Journal of Pharmaceutical
Research International 37 (11):156–165. https://doi.org/10.9734/jpri/2025/v37i117772.
Journal of Pharmaceutical Research International
Volume 37, Issue 11, Page 156-165, 2025; Article no.JPRI.146485
ISSN: 2456-9119, NLM ID: 101716968
(Past name: British Journal of Pharmaceutical Research, Past ISSN: 2231-2919,
NLM ID: 101631759)
Formulation and in-vitro Evaluation of
Extended Release Metformin
Hydrochloride Directly Compressible
Tablets by Using ULTRAMODTM
Polymer Premix
Viraj Kulthe a++*, Rauf Pathan a and Amit Raj Sinha b
a SIGACHI® Industries Limited, Dahej SEZ, Bharuch, Gujarat, India.
b SIGACHI® Industries Limited, 4th Floor, Kalayan’s Tulsiram Chambers, Madinaguda,
Hyderabad, Telangana, India.
Authors’ contributions
This work was carried out in collaboration among all authors. Author VK conceptualized and
supervised the study. Author RP performed experimental work wrote the manuscript. Author ARS
analyzed the data and reviewed the manuscript. All authors read and approved the final manuscript.
Article Information
DOI: https://doi.org/10.9734/jpri/2025/v37i117772
Open Peer Review History:
This journal follows the Advanced Open Peer Review policy. Identity of the Reviewers, Editor(s) and additional Reviewers, peer
review comments, different versions of the manuscript, comments of the editors, etc are available here:
https://pr.sdiarticle5.com/review-history/146485
Received: 08/09/2025
Published: 11/11/2025
ABSTRACT
Aims: Different types of drug release modifying polymers, their grades and quantities have to be
optimised in the formulation considering solubility characteristics and biological half-life of the
drugs. Further, formulations containing such discrete ingredients processed by conventional, multi-
step manufacturing techniques can be a resource-intensive and challenging task for the
formulators. This necessitated development of ready-to-use, co-processed polymer premixes.
Original
Methodology: Present study proposed to develop an optimised composition of a polymer premix,
ULTRAMODTM and evaluate its performance in modifying release of highly water-soluble model
drug (BCS Class III) having short biological half-life, metformin hydrochloride. Blend micromeritics
and tablet physical properties and performance (in-vitro drug release) were evaluated by
pharmacopeial methods.
Results: Such formulations showed excellent flow and compressibility properties, tablet physical
properties and drug release compared to the pharmacopeial specifications. These quality attributes
and release modifying performance of the polymer premix stored at accelerated stability conditions
for 6 months also was unchanged.
Significance: The present research contributes to scientific formulation management by
demonstrating how co-processed polymer premixes simplify extended-release tablet design,
reduce formulation optimization trials, and enhance manufacturability. ULTRAMODTM
offers a scientifically robust and industrially scalable approach to developing matrix
tablets for highly water-soluble drugs, minimizing batch variability and reducing production cost and
time.
Conclusions: Ready-to-use, co-processed polymer premix proved to be an advantageous
substitute to conventional polymers. This reduced formula optimisation challenges, manufacturing
complexity and promises quick commercialisation.
1. INTRODUCTION
The development of oral drug delivery systems that optimize therapeutic efficacy while enhancing patient compliance has been a significant focus of pharmaceutical research. Among these, modified release formulations have substantial interest, particularly in the management of chronic conditions such as diabetes mellitus, where maintaining consistent drug plasma levels is crucial for effective treatment (Brahmankar and Jaiswal, 2009). Oral drug delivery is the most widely utilized route of administration among all other routes that have been explored for systemic delivery of drugs. The oral route offers advantages such as ease of administration, patient acceptance, and cost-
effective manufacturing process (Chein, 1992). The objective of designing modified drug release delivery systems is to reduce the frequency of dosing or to increase the drug’s effectiveness by localization at the site of the action, reducing the dose required, or providing uniform drug delivery (Rajarao and Rohini, 2020). The success of modified release formulations depends largely on
the choice of polymer used in the tablet matrix. Polymers control the rate at which the drug is released from the formulation, and selecting the appropriate polymer is critical to achieving the desired release profile (Sousa et al., 2023).
Traditional polymers like hydroxypropyl methylcellulose, ethyl cellulose, and
carboxymethyl cellulose sodium have been widely used because of their predictable and reliable drug release modifying characteristics (Pockle et al., 2023). Metformin hydrochloride (Metformin HCl), which is basically used in the treatment of type 2 diabetes, is often formulated in such extended release forms to overcome the limitations such as gastrointestinal side effects, frequent dosing, shorter duration of action associated with its immediate-release counter parts (Lalla, 1991). Metformin HCl popularly formulated into a modified drug release system because it is a highly water-soluble active pharmaceutical ingredient with short half life. Such formulations ensure more stable blood sugar levels, and reduced dosing frequency also, which improves
patient adherence (Modi et al., 2011). While previous studies have modified the release of metformin HCl using wet granulation, this method presents significant formulation challenges, including drug-polymer incompatibility during aqueous processing, variability in granule particle size distribution, and prolonged processing time (Roy et al., 2013). Wet granulation often necessitates additional steps such as binder optimization, drying control, and moisture- sensitive stability testing, which complicate scale- up. In contrast, direct compression method using ready-to-use polymer premix eliminates these hurdles by avoiding water exposure, ensuring uniform drug-polymer blending, and streamlining manufacturing are critical advantages for robust
extended-release metformin HCl tablets (Takasaki et al., 2015). This research explores


