To
enable the continuous production of cocrystal-containing pharmaceutical
tablets, guaranteeing the cocrystal content of the final pharmaceutical
tablets in the solid state is critical. This study demonstrates the
quantification of caffeine-glutaric acid cocrystals in model tablets
using transmission low-frequency Raman spectroscopy. Although distinguishing
between cocrystals and raw materials using conventional Raman spectroscopy
is difficult, the use of low-frequency Raman spectroscopy enables
the discrimination of cocrystals and raw materials. Low-frequency
Raman spectra were analyzed by the partial least-squares method (PLS)
to obtain the predicted contents in the model tablets. To evaluate
the quantitative ability of this method, the root means square error
of cross-validation (RMSECV) was determined by comparing the actual
concentration and predicted content with a calibration curve. For
cocrystal-containing tablets, the quantitative ability of the transmission
mode (RMSECV = 2.06- 3.17) was 13.4–31.4% higher than that
of the backscattering mode (RMSECV= 2.37- 3.91). The coexistence of
raw crystalline materials did not affect the quantitative ability
for cocrystals.
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