Related Applications
Field of the Invention
[0002] The present invention relates to inhalers, and may be particularly suitable for dry
powder inhalers.
Background of the Invention
[0003] Generally described, known single and multiple dose Dry Powder Inhalers (DPIs) are
an established alternative to pressurized metered dose inhalers (pMDIs). DPIs can
use: (a) individual pre-measured doses in blisters containing the drug, which can
be inserted into the device prior to dispensing; or (b) bulk powder reservoirs which
are configured to administer successive quantities of the drug to the patient via
a dispensing chamber which dispenses the proper dose.
See generally Prime et al., Review of Dry Powder Inhalers, 26 Adv. Drug Delivery Rev., pp. 51-58
(1997); and
Hickey et al., A new millennium for inhaler technology, 21 Pharm. Tech., n. 6, pp.
116-125(1997). Examples using dose container disks are disclosed in
WO 02/053215,
US 2007/235029 and
WO 0134234.
[0004] In operation, DPI devices strive to administer a uniform aerosol dispersion amount
in a desired physical form of the dry powder (such as a particulate size or sizes)
into a patient's airway and direct it to desired internal deposit site(s).
[0005] Unfortunately, some dry powder inhalers can retain some amount of the drug within
the device that may be delivered with another dose of the drug. This may be particularly
prone to happen when a user actuates the inhaler but does not inhale the indexed dose
of medicament.
[0006] There remains a need for alternative inhalers and/or dose containment devices that
can be used to deliver medicaments.
Summary of Embodiments of the Invention
[0007] Embodiments of the invention provide dose container assemblies that can define individual
airway channels for one or more dose containers that align with an inhalation port
and capture dry powder from a respective dose container(s) to define apart of the
inhalation path to the inhalation port for dispensing the dry powder to a user of
the inhaler.
[0008] Some embodiments are directed to dry powder dose container assemblies that include:
(a) a dose container disk having opposing upper and lower primary surfaces and a plurality
of circumferentially spaced apart dose containers; and (b) at least one airway disk
residing above or below the dose container disk. The at least one airway disk includes
a plurality of circumferentially spaced apart airway channels. The dose containers
can have dry powder sealed therein.
[0009] Embodiments of the invention are directed to dry powder dose container assemblies.
The assemblies include: (a) a dose container disk having a plurality of circumferentially
spaced apart dose containers, the dose containers having dry powder therein (typically
a defined or metered amount); (b) an upper airway disk residing above the dose container
disk; and (c) a lower airway disk residing below the dose container disk. The upper
and the lower airway disks each include a plurality of circumferentially spaced apart
channels and pairs of the lower airway disk channels and the upper airway disk channels
are aligned with at least one corresponding dose container therebetween.
[0010] The dose container can be used in combination with an inhaler. The inhaler can include
an inhaler body with an inhalation port and a piercing mechanism. In operation, a
dose container is indexed to an inhalation position and the piercing mechanism is
configured to travel through an airway disk aperture, pierce first and second sealant
layers, enter, then stay or retract from the dose disk aperture while occluding the
airway disk aperture, thereby allowing dry powder which falls from the dose container
to reside captured in the airway channel.
[0011] In some embodiments, the dose container assembly includes both an upper and lower
airway disks and each includes a respective plurality of short airway channels and
a respective plurality of long airway channels, the short airway channels associated
with the first row of dose container apertures and the long airway channels associated
with the second row of dose container apertures. The short and long airway channels
can be arranged to reside adjacent to each other and alternate circumferentially about
the disk.
[0012] In some embodiments, pairs of upper and lower airway disk channels cooperate to define
a curvilinear airflow path to inhibit undesired spillage of the dry powder from the
inhaler (
e.g., provide a sink trap configuration).
[0013] Other embodiments are directed to dry powder inhalers. The inhalers includes an inhaler
body with an inhalation port, a dose container assembly held in the inhaler body,
a dose container openinig mechanism configured to open a dose container in a dispensing
position in the inhaler, and an indexing mechanism configured to rotate the dose container
assembly into the dispensing position.
[0014] The dose container assembly includes a dose container disk having a plurality of
circumferentially spaced apart apertures with dry powder therein. The dose container
assembly also includes a lower airway disk having a plurality of airway channels with
upwardly extending sidewall residing under the dose container disk, each of the lower
airway channels being in communication with at least one dose container aperture,
whereby the lower airway disk channels define a plurality of spaced apart single-use
or multi-use inhalation delivery paths that serially communicate with the inhalation
port to thereby provide protection from inadvertent overdose.
[0015] The dose container assembly includes: (a) a dose container disk haying opposing upper
and lower primary surfaces and a plurality of circumferentially spaced apart apertures
with first and second sealant layers attached to the upper and lower primary surfaces
of the dose container disk and defining respective floors and ceilings of the dose
container apertures to form dose containers holding dry powder therein; (b) an upper
airway disk residing above the dose container disk, the upper airway disk comprising
a plurality of circumferentially spaced apart channels with downwardly extending sidewalls;
and (c) a lower airway disk residing under the dose container disk, the lower airway
disk comprising a plurality of circumferentially spaced apart channels with upwardly
extending sidewalls. Pairs of the lower airway disk channels and the upper airway
disk channels are aligned with at least one corresponding dose container therebetween.
[0016] Yet other embodiments are directed to methods of operating an inhaler. The methods
include: (a) providing a dose container ring having staggered concentric dose container
apertures sealed by upper and lower sealant layers residing over and under the apertures
respectively to define sealed dose containers, the dose container ring attached to
an airway channel disk having a plurality of circumferentially spaced apart airway
channels, at least one for each dose container; (b) rotating the dose container ring
and disk together to present a respective dose container and a corresponding airway
channel to a dispensing position in the inhaler; (c) advancing a piercing mechanism
to open both sealant layers and release dry powder from the dose container to the
corresponding airway channel; (d) leaving the piercing mechanism in an extended position
or at least partially retracting the piercing mechanism; (e) fully retracting the
piercing mechanism from the airway disk aperture after the step of leaving; and (f)
isolating the airway channel associated with the released dry powder from an inhalation
flow path so that the channel is reused only once or is not used for any subsequent
inhalation delivery.
[0017] Additional embodiments are directed to methods of fabricating a dose container assembly.
The methods include: (a) providing a dose container disk having upper and lower primary
surfaces with a plurality of circumferentially spaced apart apertures; (b) attaching
a sealant layer to one of the upper or lower primary surfaces of the dose container
disk; (c) filling the dose container disk apertures with dry powder; (d) attaching
a sealant layer to the other primary surface of the dose container to provide sealed
dose containers; (e) placing the dose container disk between upper and lower airway
disks; (f) aligning the dose containers with circumferentially spaced apart airway
channels on upper and lower airway disks so that each dose container is in communication
with one of the airway channels in both the upper and lower disks; and (g) attaching
the upper and lower airway disks to sandwich the dose container disk therebetween.
[0018] In some embodiments, the dose container assemblies can be configured to allow for
operation irrespective of orientation and to capture the dose from a respective dose
container whether the inhaler device is held right side-up or down so that the dry
powder is retained in the respective airway path and the inhaler is thereby resistant
to overdosing. In some embodiments; the inhalers can also provide overdose protection
to inhibit dispensing accumulated doses released from different dose containers.
[0019] It is noted that aspects of the invention described with respect to one embodiment,
may be incorporated in a different embodiment although not specifically described
relative thereto. That is, all embodiments and/of features of any embodiment can be
combined in any way and/or combination. Applicant reserves the right to change any
originally filed claim or file any new claim accordingly, including the right to be
able to amend any originally filed claim to depend from-and/or incorporate-any feature
of any other claim although not originally claimed in that manner. These and other
objects and/or aspects of the present invention are explained in detail in the specification
set forth below.
Brief Description of the Figures
[0020]
Figure 1A is a front perspective view of an inhaler With a cover according to some embodiments
of the present invention.
Figure 1B is a front perspective of the inhaler shown in Figure 1A with the cover in an open position according to some embodiments of the present invention.
Figure 2A is a top perspective view of an exemplary dose container assembly according to some
embodiments of the present invention.
Figure 2B is an exploded view of the assembly shown in Figure 2A.
Figure 2C is a partial cutaway view of airway channels aligned with two dose containers according
to some embodiments, of the present invention.
Figure 2D is a top perspective view of another exemplary dose container assembly according
to some embodiments of the present invention.
Figure 2E is an exploded view of the dose container assembly shown in Figure 2D according to embodiments of the present invention.
Figure 2F is an exploded view of a dose container assembly with stacked dose disks according
to embodiments of the present invention.
Figure 2G is a partial cutaway view of airway channels aligned with two concentric rows of
staggered dose containers according to some embodiments of the present invention.
Figure 3A is a top perspective view of a dose container ring according to some embodiments
of the present invention.
Figure 3B is a top perspective view of a dose container ring according to some other embodiments
of the present invention.
Figure 3C is a partial cutaway view of a single dose container according to some embodiments
of the present invention.
Figure 3D is a partial cutaway view of single dose container according to some embodiments
of the present invention.
Figure 4A is a greatly enlarged top perspective view of a lower airway disk according to some
embodiments of the present invention.
Figure 4B is a top view of lower airway disk according to some embodiments of the present invention.
Figure 4C is a bottom view of an exemplary lower airway disk.
Figure 5A is a greatly enlarged top perspective view of an upper airway disk according to some
embodiments of the present invention.
Figure 5B is a greatly enlarged perspective view of an upper airway disk according to other
embodiments of the present invention.
Figure 6 is a greatly enlarged partial view of the dose container assembly shown in Figure 2A according to embodiments of the present invention.
Figures 7A-7C are partial cutaway views of a dose container assembly in an inhaler cooperating
with a piercing mechanism having a three-stage operation sequence according to some
embodiments of the present invention.
Figure 8A is a bottom perspective partial cutaway view of an inhaler with a dose container
assembly configured so that the outer ring of dose containers are aligned with airway
channels in disks that have "sink traps to inhibit spillage according to some embodiments
of the present invention.
Figure 8B is a side perspective view of the device shown in Figure 8A illustrating the inner row of dose containers are aligned with airway channels in
disks that define "sink traps" to inhibit spillage according to some embodiments of
the present invention.
Figure 9A is a top perspective view of a dose container assembly and piercing mechanism according
to some embodiments of the present invention.
Figure 9B is a top view of the device shown in Figure 9A.
Figure 9C is a side view of the device shown in Figure 9A.
Figure 10 is a partial exploded view of the device shown in Figure 9A according to some embodiments of the present invention.
Figure 11 is a top assembled view of the portion of the device shown in Figure 10.
Figure 12 is a side section view taken along lines 12-12 of Figure 11, illustrating an outer ring actuation according to some embodiments of the present
invention.
Figure 13 is a top assembled view of the portion of the device shown in Figure 10.
Figure 14 is a side section view taken along lines 14-14 of Figure 13, illustrating an inner ring actuation according to embodiments of the present invention.
Figure 15A is a top view of a dose container ring according to some embodiments of the present
invention.
Figure 15B is a partial enlarged fragmentary view of the ring shown in Figure 15A.
Figure 16 is a side view of the ring shown in Figure 15A.
Figure 17A is a greatly enlarged partial cutaway view of an inhaler with discrete airway channels
for each dose container and along airway path according to some embodiments of the
present invention.
Figures 17B-17D are greatly enlarged partial cutaway side perspective views of an inhaler with a
biasing mechanism according to embodiments of the present invention.
Figure 17E is a greatly enlarged cutaway view of an airflow path in an inhaler and secure airpath
joint provided by a biasing mechanism such as that shown, for example, in Figures 17B-17D or 17F and 17G according to Embodiments of the present invention.
Figure 17F is a perspective partial cutaway view of an inhaler with an alternate biasing mechanism
(shown inverted from normal orientation) according to embodiments of the present invention.
Figure 17G is an additional perspective view of the biasing mechanism shown in Figure 17F.
Figure 18A is a greatly enlarged partial cutaway view of an inhaler with discrete airway channels
and a short airway path according to some embodiments of the present invention.
Figure 18B is a greatly enlarged partial cutaway view of the inhaler shown in Figure 18A illustrating an indexing mechanism according to some embodiments of the present invention.
Figure 18C is a greatly enlarged partial cutaway view of an inhaler with discrete airway charnels
and a short airway path according to some embodiments of the present invention.
Figure 18D is a greatly enlarged partial cutaway view of the inhaler shown in Figure 18C illustrating an indexing mechanism according to some embodiments of the present invention.
Figure 18E is an exploded side perspective view of components of the indexing mechanism shown
in Figures 18C and 18D.
Figure 18F is an enlarged side perspective view of some assembled components of the inhaler
devices shown in Figure 18E.
Figure 19A is an enlarged partial section view of an alternate piercing mechanism for the dose
containers according to some embodiments of the present invention.
Figure 19B is an enlarged partial section view of a piercing mechanism similar to that shown
in Figure 19A according to some embodiments of the present invention.
Figure 19C is a partial front schematic view of a piercing mechanism with a fluted piercer according
to some embodiments of the present invention.
Figure 19D is an end view of the device shown in Figure 19C.
Figure 19E is a partial front schematic view of another fluted piercer configuration according
to some embodiments of the present invention.
Figure 19F is an end view of an exemplary four lobe fluted piercer according to some embodiments
of the present invention.
Figure 19G is a partial cutaway schematic illustration of an inhaler with a piercing configuration
according to some embodiments of the present invention.
Figure 20 is an enlarged partial section view of an inhaler.having generally "U" shaped inhalation
flow paths according to embodiments of the present invention.
Figure 21 is a flow chair of exemplary operations that can be used to operate an inhaler according
to some embodiments of the present invention.
Figure 22 is a flow chart of operations that can be used to fabricate or assemble a dose container
assembly according to some embodiments of the present invention.
Description of Embodiments of the Invention
[0021] The present invention will now be described more fully hereinafter with reference
to the accompanying figures, in which embodiments of the invention are shown. This
invention may, however, be embodied in many different forms and should not be construed
as limited to the embodiments set forth herein. Like numbers refer to like elements
throughout. In the figures, certain layers, components for features may be exaggerated
for clarity, and broken lines illustrate optional features or operations unless specified
otherwise. In addition, the sequence of operations (or steps) is not limited to the
order presented in the figures and/or claims unless specifically indicated otherwise.
In the drawings, the thickness of lines, layers, features, components and/or regions
may be exaggerated for clarity and broken lines illustrate optional features or operations,
unless specified otherwise. Features described with respect to one figure or embodiment
can be associated with another embodiment of figure although not specifically described
or shown as such.
[0022] It will be understood that when a feature, such as a layer, region or substrate,
is referred to as being "on" another feature or element, it can be directly on the
other feature or element or intervening features and/or elements may also be present.
In contrast, when an element is referred to as being "directly on" another feature
or element, there are no intervening elements present. It will also be understood
that, when a feature or element is referred to as being "connected", "attached" or
"coupled" to another feature or element, it can be directly connected, attached or
coupled to the other element or intervening elements may be present. In contrast,
when a feature or element is referred to as being "directly.connected", "directly
attached" or "directly coupled" to another element, there are no intervening elements
present. Although described or shown with respect to one embodiment, the features
so, described or shown can apply to other embodiments.
[0023] The terminology used herein is for the purpose of describing particular embodiments
only and is not intended to be limiting of the invention. As used herein, the singular
forms "a", "an" and "the" are intended to include the plural forms as well, unless
the context clearly indicates otherwise. If will be further understood that the terms
"comprises" and/or "comprising," when used in this specification, specify the presence
of stated features, steps, operations, elements, and/or components, but do not preclude
the presence or addition of one or more other features, steps, operations, elements,
components, and/or groups thereof. As used herein, the term "and/or" includes any
and all combinations of one or more of the associated listed items.
[0024] Spatially relative terms, such as "under", "below", "lower", "oyer", "upper" and
the like, may be used herein for ease of description to describe one element or feature's
relationship to another element(s) or feature(s) as illustrated in the figures. It
will be understood that the spatially relative terms are intended to encompass different
orientations of the device in use or operation in addition to the orientation depicted
in the figures. For example, if a device in the figures is inverted, elements described
as "under" or "beneath" other elements or features would then be oriented "over" the
other elements or features. Thus, the exemplary term "under" can encompass both an
orientation of over and under. The device may be otherwise oriented (rotated 90 degrees
or at other orientations) and the spatially relative descriptors used herein interpreted
accordingly. Similarly, the terms "upwardly", "downwardly", "vertical", "horizontal"
and the like are used herein for the purpose of explanation only unless specifically
indicated otherwise.
[0025] It will be understood that although the terms "first" and "second" are used herein
to describe various components, regions, layers and/or sections, these regions, layers
and/or sections should not be limited by these terms. These terms are only used to
distinguish one component region, layer or section from another component, region,
layer or section. Thus, a first component, region, layer or section discussed below
could be termed a second component, region, layer or section, and
vice versa, without departing from the teachings of the present invention. Like numbers refer
to like elements throughout.
[0026] Unless otherwise defined, all terms (including technical and scientific terms) used
herein have the same meaning as commonly understood by one of ordinary skill in the
art to which this invention belongs. It will be further understood that terms, such
as those defined in commonly used dictionaries, should be interpreted as having a
meaning that is consistent with their meaning in the context of the specification
and relevant art and should not be interpreted in an idealized or overly format sense
unless expressly so defined-herein. Well-known functions or constructions may not
be described in detail for brevity and/or clarity.
[0027] In the description of the present invention that follows, certain terms are employed
to refer to the positional relationship of certain structures relative to other structures.
As used herein, the term "front" or "forward" and derivatives thereof refer to the
general or primary direction that the dry powder travels to be dispensed to a patient
from a dry powder inhaler; this term is intended to be synonymous with the term "downstream,"
which is often used in manufacturing or material flow environments to indicate that
certain material traveling or being acted upon is farther along in that process than
other material. Conversely, the terms "rearward" and "upstream" and derivatives thereof
refer to the direction opposite, respectively, the forward or downstream direction.
[0028] The term "deagglomeration" and its derivatives refer to flowing or processing dry
powder in the inhaler airflow path to inhibit the dry powder from remaining or becoming
agglomerated or cohesive during inspiration.
[0029] The inhalers and methods of the present invention may be particularly suitable for
holding a partial or bolus dose or doses of one or more types of particulate dry powder
substances that are formulated for
in vivo inhalant dispersion (using an inhaler) to subjects, including, but not limited to,
animal and, typically, human subjects. The inhalers can be used for nasal and/or oral
(mouth) respiratory inhalation delivery, but are typically oral inhalers.
[0030] The terms "sealant", "sealant layer" and/or "sealant material" includes configurations
that have at least one layer of at least one material and can be provided as a continuous
layer that covers the entire upper surface and/or lower surface or may be provided
as strips or pieces to cover portions of the device,
e.g., to reside over at least a target one or more of the dose container apertures. Thus,
terms "sealant" and "sealant layer" includes single and multiple layer materials,
typically comprising at least one foil layer. The sealant or sealant layer can be
a thin multi-layer laminated sealant material with elastomeric and foil materials.
The sealant layer can be selected to provide drug stability as they may contact the
dry powder in the respective dose containers.
[0031] The sealed dose containers can be configured to inhibit oxygen and moisture penetration
to provide a sufficient shelf life.
[0032] The term "primary surface" refers to a surface that has a greater area than another
surface and the primary surface can be substantially planar or may be otherwise configured.
For example, a primary surface can include protrusions or recessions, such as where
some blister configurations are used. Thus, a disk can have upper and lower primary
surfaces and a minor surface (
e.g., a wall with a thickness) that extends between and connects the two.
[0033] The dry powder substance may include one or more active pharmaceutical constituents
as well as biocompatible additives that form the desired formulation or blend. As
used herein, the term "dry powder" is used interchangeable with "dry powder formulation"
and means that the dry powder can comprise one or a plurality of constituents, agents
or ingredients with one or a plurality of (average) particulate size ranges. The term
"low-density" dry powder means dry powders having a density of about 0.8 g/cm
3 or less. In particular embodiments, the low-density powder may have a density of
about 0.5 g/cm
3 or less. The dry powder may be a dry powder with cohesive or agglomeration tendencies.
[0034] The term "filling" means providing a bolus or sub-bolus metered amount of dry powder.
Thus, the respective dose container is not required to be volumetrically full.
[0035] In any event, individual dispensable quantities of dry powder formulations can comprise
a single ingredient or a plurality of ingredients, whether active or inactive. The
inactive ingredients can include additives added to enhance flowability or to facilitate
aerosolization delivery to the desired target. The dry powder drug formulations can
include active particulate sizes that vary. The device may be particularly suitable
for dry powder formulations having particulates which are in the range of between
about 0.5-50µm, typically in the range of between about 0.5µm - 20.0µm, and more typically
in the range of between about 0.5µm -8.0µm. The dry powder formulation can also include
flow-enhancing ingredients, which typically have particulate sizes that may be larger
than the active ingredient particulate sizes. In certain embodiments, the flow-enhancing
ingredients can include, excipients having particulate sizes on the order of about
50-100 µm. Examples of excipients include lactose and trehalose. Other types of excipients
can also be employed, such as, but not limited to, sugars which are approved by the
United States Food and Drug Administration ("FDA") as cryoprotectants (
e.g., mannitol) or as solubility enhancers (
e.g., cyclodextrine) or other generally recognized as safe ("GRAS") excipients.
[0036] "Active agent" or "active ingredient" as described herein includes an ingredient,
agent, drug, compound, or composition of matter or mixture, which provides some pharmacologic,
often beneficial, effect. This includes foods, food supplements, nutrients, drugs,
vaccines, vitamins, and other beneficial agents. As used herein, the terms further
include any physiologically or pharmacologically active substance that produces a
localized and/or systemic effect in a patient.
[0037] The active ingredient or agent that can be delivered includes antibiotics, antiviral
agents, anepileptics, analgesics, anti-inflammatory agents and bronchodilators, and
may be inorganic and/or organic compounds, including, without limitation, drugs which
act on the peripheral nerves, adrenergic receptors, cholinergic receptors, the skeletal
muscles, the cardiovascular system, smooth muscles, the blood circulatory system,
synoptic sites, neuroeffector junctional sites, endocrine and hormone systems, the
immunological system, the reproductive system, the skeletal system, autacoid systems,
the alimentary and excretory systems, the histamine system, and the central nervous
system. Suitable agents may be selected from, for example and without limitation,
polysaccharides, steroids, hypnotics and sedatives, psychic energizers, tranquilizers,
anticonvulsants, muscle relaxants, anti-Parkinson agents, analgesics, anti-inflammatories,
muscle contractants, antimicrobials, antimalarials, hormonal agents including contraceptives,
sympathomimetics, polypeptides and/or proteins (capable of eliciting physiological
effects), diuretics, lipid regulating agents, antiandrogenic agents, antiparasitics,
neoplastics, antineoplastics, hypoglycemics, nutritional agents and supplements, growth
supplements, fats, antienteritis agents, electrolytes, vaccines and diagnostic agents.
[0038] The active agents may be naturally occurring molecules or they may be recombinantly
produced, or they may be analogs of the naturally occurring or recombinantly produced
active agents with one or more amino acids added or deleted. Further, the active agent
may comprise live attenuated or killed viruses suitable for use as vaccines. Where
the active agent is insulin, the term "insulin" includes natural extracted human insulin,
recombinantly produced human insulin, insulin extracted from bovine and/or porcine
and/or other sources, recombinantly produced porcine, bovine or other suitable donor/extraction
insulin and mixtures of any of the above. The insulin may be neat (that is, in its
substantially purified form), but may also include excipients as commercially formulated.
Also included in the term "insulin" are insulin analogs where one or more of the amino
acids of the naturally occurring or recombinantly produced insulin has been deleted
or added.
[0039] It is to be understood that more than one active ingredient or agent may be incorporated
into the aerosolized active agent formulation and that the use of the term "agent"
or "ingredient" in no way excludes the use of two or more such agents. Indeed, some
embodiments of the present invention contemplate administering combination drugs that
may be mixed
in situ.
[0040] Examples of diseases, conditions or disorders that may be treated according to embodiments
of the invention include, but are not limited to, asthma, COPD (chronic obstructive
pulmonary disease), viral or bacterial infections, influenza, allergies, cystic fibrosis,
and other respiratory ailments as well as diabetes and other insulin resistance disorders.
The dry powder inhalation may be used to deliver locally-acting agents such as antimicrobials,
protease inhibitors, and nucleic acids/oligionucleotides as well as systemic agents
such as peptides like leuprolide and proteins such as insulin. For example, inhaler-based
delivery of antimicrobial agents such as antitubercular compounds, proteins such as
insulin for diabetes therapy or other insulin-resistance related disorders, peptides
such as leuprolide acetate for treatment of prostate cancer and/or endometriosis and
nucleic acids or ogligonucleotides for cystic fibrosis gene therapy may be performed:
See e.g. Wolff et al., Generation of Aerosolized Drugs, J. Aerosol. Med. pp. 89-106 (1994).
See also U.S. Patent Application Publication No. 20010063761, entitled
Method for Administering ASPB28-Human-Insulin and
U.S. Patent Application Publication No. 20010007853, entitled
Method for Administering Monomeric Insulin Analogs.
[0041] Typical dose amounts of the unitized dry powder mixture dispersed in the inhalers
may vary depending on the patient size, the systemic target, and the particular drug(s).
The dose.amounts and type of drug held by a dose container system may vary per dose
container-or may be the same. In some embodiments, the dry powder dose amounts can
be about 100 mg or less, typically less than 50 mg, and more typically between about
0.1 mg to about 30 mg.
[0042] In some embodiments, such as for pulmonary conditions (
i.e., asthma or COPD), the dry powder can be provided as about 5 mg total weight (the
dose amount may be blended to provide this weight). A conventional exemplary dry powder
dose amount for an average adult is less than about 50 mg, typically between about
10-30 mg and for an average adolescent pediatric subject is typically from about 5-10
mg. A typical dose concentration may be between about 1-5%. Exemplary dry powder drugs
include, but are not limited to, albuterol, fluticasone, beclamethasone, cromolyn,
terbutaline, fenoterol, β-agonists (including long-acting β-agonists), salmeterol,
formoterol, cortico-steroids and glucocorticoids.
[0043] In certain embodiments, the administered bolus or dose can be formulated with an
increase in concentration (an increased percentage of active constituents) over conventional
blends. Further, the dry powder formulations may be configured as a smaller administrable
dose compared to the conventional 10-25 mg doses. For example, each administrable
dry powder dose may be on the order of less than about 60-70% of that of conventional
doses. In certain particular embodiments, using the dispersal systems provided by
certain embodiments of the DPI configurations of the instant invention, the adult
dose may be reduced to under about 15 mg, such as between about 10µg-10mg, and more
typically between about 50µg-10mg. The active constituent(s) concentration may be
between about 5-10%. In other embodiments, active constituent concentrations can be
in the range of between about 10-20%, 20-25%, or even larger. In particular embodiments,
such as for nasal inhalation, target dose amounts may be between about 12-100µg.
[0044] In certain particular embodiments, during inhalation, the dry powder in a particular
drug compartment or blister may be formulated in high concentrations of an active
pharmaceutical constituent(s) substantially without additives (such as excipients).
As used herein, "substantially without additives" means that the dry powder is in
a substantially pure active formulation with only minimal amounts of other non-biopharmacological
active ingredients. The term "minimal amounts" means that the non-active ingredients
may be present, but are present in greatly reduced amounts, relative to the active
ingredient(s), such that they comprise less than about 10%, and preferably less than
about 5%, of the dispensed dry powder formulation, and, in certain embodiments, the
non-active ingredients are present in only trace amounts.
[0045] In some embodiments, the unit dose amount of dry powder held in a respective drug
compartment or dose container is less than about 10 mg, typically about 5 mg of blended
drug and lactose or other additive (
e.g., 5 mg LAC), for treating pulmonary conditions such as asthma. Insulin may be provided
in quantities of about 4 mg or less, typically about 3.6 mg of pure insulin. The dry
powder may be inserted into a dose container/drug compartment in a "compressed" or
partially compressed manner or may be provided as free flowing particulates.
[0046] Some embodiments of the invention are directed to inhalers that can deliver multiple
different drugs for combination delivery. Thus, for example, in some embodiments,
some or all of the dose containers may include two different drugs or different dose
containers may contain different drugs configured for dispensing substantially concurrently.
[0047] The inhalers can be configured to provide any suitable number of doses, typically
between about 30 - 120 doses, and more typically between about 30-60 doses. The inhalers
can deliver one drug or a combination of drugs. In some embodiments, the inhalers
can provide between about 30-60 doses of two different drugs (in the same or different
unit amounts), for a total of between about 60-120 individual unit doses, respectively.
The inhaler can provide between a 30 day to a 60 day (or even greater) supply of medicine.
In some embodiments, the inhalers can be configured to hold about 60 doses of the
same drug or drug combination, in the same or different unit amounts, which can be
a 30 day supply (for a twice per day dosing) or a 60 day supply for single daily treatments.
[0048] Certain embodiments may be particularly suitable for dispensing medication to respiratory
patients, diabetic patients, cystic fibrosis patients, or for treating pain. The inhalers
may also be used to dispense narcotics, hormones and/or infertility treatments.
[0049] The dose container assembly and inhaler may be particularly suitable for dispensing
medicament for the treatment of respiratory disorders. Appropriate medicaments may
be selected from, for example, analgesic, e.g., codeine, dihydromorphine, ergotamine,
fentanyl or morphine; anginal preparations, e.g., diltiazem; antiallergics, e.g.,
cromoglycate, ketotifen or nedocromil; antiinfectives e.g., cephalosporins, penicillins,
streptomycin, sulphonamides, tetracyclines and pentamidine; antihistamines, e.g.,
methapyrilene; anti-inflammatories, e.g., beclomethasone dipropionate, fluticasone
propionate, flunisolide, budesonide; rofleponide, mometasone furoate or triamcinolone
acetonide; antitussives, e.g., noscapine; bronchodilators, e.g., albuterol, salmeterol,
ephedrine, adrenaline, fenoterol, formoterol, isoprenaline, metaproterenol, phenylephrine,
phenylpropanolamine, pirbuterol, reproterol, rimiterol, terbutaline, isoetharine,
tulobuterol, or (-)-4-amino-3, 5-dichloro-α-[[6-[2-(2-pyridinyl) ethoxy] hexyl] methyl]
benzenemethanol; diuretics, e.g., amiloride; anticholinergics, e.g., ipratropium,
tiotropium, atropine or oxitropium; hormones, e.g., cortisone, hydrocortisone or prednisolone;
xanthines, e.g., aminophylline, choline theophyllinate; lysine theophyllinate or theophylline;
therapeutic proteins and peptides,
e.g., insulin or glucagon. It will be clear to a person of skill in the art that, where
appropriate, the medicaments may be used in the form of salts, (
e.g., as alkali metal or amine salts or as acid addition salts) or as esters (
e.g., lower alkyl esters) of as solvates (e.g., hydrates) to optimize the activity and/or
stability of the medicament.
[0050] Some particular embodiments of the dose container assembly and/or inhaler include
medicaments that.are selected from the group consisting of: albuterol, salmeterol,
fluticasone propionate and beclometasone dipropionate and salts or solvates thereof,
e.g., the sulphate of albuterol and the xinafoate of salmeterol. Medicaments can also
be delivered in combinations. Examples of particular formulations containing combinations
of active ingredients include those that contain salbutamol (
e.g., as the free base or the sulphate salt) or salmeterol (
e.g., as the xinafoate salt) in combination with an anti-inflammatory steroid such as
a beclomethasone ester (
e.g., the dipropionate) or a fluticasone ester (
e.g., the propionate).
[0051] Turning now to the figures,
Figures 1A and
1B illustrate an example of a multi-dose inhaler
10 with a cover
11 and inhalation port
10p. The cover
11 may extend over a top surface of the inhaler to extend down over an inhalation port
10p of the mouthpiece
10m, then extend rearward away from the mouthpiece
10m over a bottom surface of the inhaler. However, this inhaler configuration is shown
merely for completeness and embodiments of the invention are not limited to this inhaler
configuration as other form factors, covers and inhalation port configurations may
be used.
[0052] Figure 2A illustrates a dose container assembly
20 with a dose ring or disk
30 having a plurality of dose containers
30c. As shown in
Figures 2B and
2E, in some embodiments, the dose ring or disk
30 can include a plurality of circumferentially spaced apart through apertures
30a that form a portion of the dose containers
30c. As shown in
Figure 2E, the dose containers
30c can be defined by dose container apertures
30a and upper and lower sealants
36,
37.
[0053] As shown, the dose container assembly
20 includes a lower airway disk
40 and an upper airway disk
50. In other embodiments, the dose container assembly
20 can include the dose container disk
30 and only one of the lower airway disk
40 or the upper airway disk
50. In such a configuration, another type of airway can be used for the other side of
the disk
30, such as, but not limited to, a fixed or "global" upper or lower airway can be used with
the individual airways provided by either an upper or lower airway disk
50, 40. Also, it is contemplated that the upper and lower airway disks
50, 40 described herein can be reversed for normal operation (or inadvertently for atypical
operation) so that the lower airway disk is the upper airway disk and the upper airway
disk is the lower airway disk.
[0054] As shown in
Figures 2A and
2B, the lower and upper airway disks
40, 50, respectively, include a plurality of circumferentially spaced apart airway channels
41, 51, respectively. Typically, the disks
40, 50 include one channel
41, 51 for one dose container
30c. However, in other embodiments, as shown, for example, in
Figure 2C, a respective airway channel
51,
41 from one or both of the disks
50', 40' can be in communication with two or more different dose containers
30c. This configuration will allow for (simultaneous) combination delivery of two or
more different dry powders from two or more dose containers
30c in communication with the associated one airway channel
51 or
41 and/or a respective airway channel pair. Thus, while embodiments of the invention
are illustrated as releasing only a dose from a single dose container
30c during one delivery, other embodiments allow the inhalers to dispense a combination
drug so that two or more dose containers
30c may use a respective airway channel
41, 51 for delivery.
[0055] It is also noted that the disk
30 can have a single dose container
30c circumferentially spaced apart between aligned dual containers
30c1,
30c2. However, it is contemplated that in some embodiments, the dose disk
30 can be configured so that the dose disk
30 has radially spaced apart dual (or more) containers
30c1,
30c2 with a corresponding airway channel
41/51 (typically a channel pair) and does not require either the shorter channels
41, 51 or a single dose container
30c. The dose containers can be arranged in concentric rows of aligned pairs (or more)
of dose containers. In some embodiments, the combination delivery configuration can
employ dose containers
30c1,
30c2 which can be configured to reside under or over a respective airway channel
41/51, but the airway channel
41/51 can angularly extend from a dose container proximate the inner perimeter to a staggered
dose container proximate the outer perimeter of the disk as shown in
Figure 2G. However, the airway channel(s) can extend over or under two or more dose channels
with non-staggered centerlines.
[0056] In other embodiments, as shown in
Figure 2F, two or more dose disks
30 can be stacked and reside either sandwiched between the airway channel disks
40, 50 or can be used with a single airway disk
40/50 and the piercer can be configured to open two or more stacked dose disk containers
to release the medicaments from two or more stacked dose containers and allow inhalation
using one or both channels
41, 51.
[0057] In other embodiments, the different dose containers in communication with the respective
airway channel
51, 41 can allow one dose container
30c1 to release dry powder to the airway channel
41 and/or
51, then be used again later for another dose container
30c2. Thus, embodiments of the invention allow for some or all airway channels
41, 51 to be used once or twice (although other configurations may allow for greater number
of uses).
[0058] In some embodiments, the airway channels
41, 51 can define airways that are not able to release dry powder residing in a respective
airway channel to a user once the inhaler is indexed again to another position so
that the outer ring of dose containers are aligned with airway disks. The channels
can be configured to have "sink traps" to inhibit spillage according to some embodiments
of the present invention to provide overdose protection (unless the dual use configuration
is used whereby only a single other dose may be released using that airway channel(s)
as noted above).
[0059] Where two airway disks are used,
e.g., both the lower and upper disks
40, 50, the inhaler device
10 can be configured to operate even when inverted and have the same overdose protection
feature. Spillage of dry powder from the inhaler
10 as the dose container
30c is opened can be influenced by gravity. For example, for a conventional obround or
elliptical mouthpiece shape, there are two primary device orientations (right-side-up
and upside-down), embodiments of the invention allow for operation of the inhaler
device in both orientations. In the embodiment shown, for example, in
Figure 2A, this can be accomplished by having an individual airway section for a respective
dose container
30c (or dose containers where combination drug delivery is desired) both above and below
the target corresponding dose container(s)
30c.
[0060] Figures 2A, 2D and
3A illustrate that the dose container disk
30 can include 60 dose containers
30c while
Figure 3B illustrates that the dose container disk
30 can include 30 dose containers
30c. Greater or lesser numbers of dose containers may be used.
[0061] Figure 2E illustrates that sealant layers
36, 37 may be configured as annular flat rings as shown can be used to seal the top and
bottom surfaces of the dose disk
30. The sealant layers
36, 37 can have the same or different material(s) and may include foil, polymer(s) and/or
elastomer(s), or other suitable material or combinations of materials, including laminates.
Typically, the sealant layers
36, 37 are thin flexible sealant layers comprising foil.
[0062] The sealant layers
36, 37 (where used) may be provided as a substantially continuous ring as shown in
Figure 2E or may be attached to the dose container disk
30 as individual strips or spots of sealant that can be placed over and under the apertures
30a. In other embodiments, sealant layers may be provided on only one primary surface
of the dose disk
30, and the apertures
30a may be closed on one side rather than have through apertures (not shown). In yet
other embodiments, the dose disk
30 can have a blister configuration
130 (
Figure 17A).
[0063] Figures 2A, 2D, 3A and
3B also illustrate that the dose container disk
30 can include at least one indexing notch
34, shown as a plurality of circumferentially spaced apart indexing notches
34. A mating component on one of the other disks
40, 50 can be used to help orient the disks
30, 40, 50 relative to each other. For example, one of the airway disks
40, 50, typically the lower disk
40, may include an inner wall with an outwardly radially extending tab
45 (
Figures 4A, 6) that aligns with and engages one of those notches
34 to position the channels
41, 51 in alignment with the dose containers
30c. Other alignment means may be used, including, for example, the reverse of the notch
and tab configuration described (
e.g., one or both airway disks
40, 50 can have a notch and the dose container disk
30 can include a tab or other component).
[0064] As shown in
Figures 2B,
2D, 3A and
3B, the dose containers
30c may be arranged so that they are circumferentially spaced apart in one or more rows.
As shown in
Figure 3A, the dose containers
30c are arranged in staggered concentric rows, a front row
31 at a first radius from a center of the disk and a back row
32 at a second different radius. The dose containers
30c can be arranged so that centerlines of the dose containers
30c of the back row are circumferentially offset from the centerlines of the dose containers
30c in the front row by a distance. As shown in
Figure 3A dose containers
30c on each respective row are spaced apart a distance "D" and the offset of the centerlines
of those on the back row to those on the front row is "D/2". The dose container disk
30 can be a molded polymer, copolymer or blends and derivatives thereof, or may comprise
metal, or combinations thereof, or other materials that are capable of providing sufficient
moisture resistance.
[0065] The dose container disk
30 can have an outer diameter of between about 50-100 mm, typically about 65 mm and
a thickness of between about 2-5 mm, typically about 3 mm. The disk
30 can comprise a cyclic olefin (COC) copolymer. The apertures
30a can have a diameter of between about 2-5 mm, typically about 3 mm and the sidewalls
30w of the dose containers
30c may have an angle or draft of about 1-3 degrees per side, typically about 1.5 degrees,
as shown in
Figure 3D, to facilitate removal from a mold (where a molding process is used to form the disk
30). The dose container
30 is configured to be able to protect the powder from moisture ingress, while providing
a desired number of doses in a compact overall inhaler size. The individual dose container
apertures
30a are spaced apart from each other to allow sufficient seal area and material thickness
for moisture protection of the powder.
[0066] Similar to the embodiment shown in
Figure 2E, Figure 3C illustrates that the dose containers
30c may be defined by apertures
30a sealed by sealant layers
36, 37 over and under the apertures
30a. As discussed above, the sealant layers
36, 37 can include foil, a polymer and/or elastomer, or other suitable materials or combinations
of materials, including laminates. In a dry powder medicament inhaler
10, the drug powder is stored in a closed, moisture-resistant space provided by the
dose container
30c.
[0067] Embodiments of the invention provide a dose container assembly
20 that can provide a suitable seal and facilitate attachment of the airway disks
40, 50 to hold the dose ring or disk 30 therebetween. As shown in
Figures 2D, 2E, in some embodiments, the dose container disk
30 contains sealants
36, 37 which may be a continuous layer over the upper and lower (primary) surfaces of the
dose disk
30 and the upper and lower airway disks
50, 40 can contact the respective sealant and abut the dose disk
20 to allow for a tight fit. The exemplary attachment features shown in
Figures 2A, 2E and
6 can reduce air leakage by allowing a close fit of the airway disks
40, 50 to the dose ring
30. The disks
40,
50 can sandwich the dose ring
30 and the dose ring can act as the "stop" to set the depth of engagement of the assembly
features on the airway disks
40, 50. Embodiments of the invention provide a feature to index and/or orient the airway
disks
40, 50 relative to the dose ring
30 as discussed above. In addition or alternatively, as shown in
Figures 2E and
4A, in some embodiments, relatively simple frictional engagement members, such as, but
not limited to, "crush ribs"
47r, on one or both of the airway disks
40,
50 may be used to secure their attachment to each other as will be discussed further
below.
[0068] Figure 4A illustrates an example of a lower airway disk
40. As shown, the disk
40 defines a plurality of circumferentially spaced apart channels
41. For the staggered concentric dose container configuration, the disk
40 can include alternating long and short airway channels
42, 43, respectively. Each channel
41 includes opposing end portions
41a, 41b, one (substantially or entirely) closed end portion
41a typically positioned adjacent the dose container
30c and one open end portion
41b. The open end portion end portion
41b can merge into and/or is positioned adjacent the exit port
10p and/or mouthpiece
10m (
Figures 7A-7C) and/or a make-up air port or channel. The intake and flow can be in either direction
and the open end
41b can be configured to face either the inner or outer perimeter of the disk
40 (
e.g., be either positioned radially innermost or radially outermost on the disk
40)
. The channels
41 include upwardly extending sidewalls
41w with adjacent pairs of the long and short channels sharing one of the sidewalls
41w. Optionally, as shown by feature
48 in
Figure 4A aligned with some charnels, all or some of the channels
41 can include a small bleed hole
48 that allows air to enter but is sized to inhibit dry powder from exiting therefrom
(the bleed holes
48 are shown only with a few of the channels
41 for ease of illustration).
[0069] Figures 4A and
4B also illustrate that the disk
40 can include circumferentially spaced apart upwardly extending walls or tabs
47. One of which can include the radially (outwardly) extending tab
45 discussed above. The disk
40 can also or alternatively optionally include circumferentially extending recesses
which align with tabs on the upper airway disk
50 to sandwich the dose disk
30 therebetween. The tabs
47 can optionally include crush ribs
47r that matably engage with tabs
57 on the upper airway disk
50 to hold the three piece dose disk assembly
20 together with sufficient force without requiring and additional attachment means.
[0070] Figures 4C, 18D and
20 illustrate that the disk
40 can also include dose indicia
44 so that a user can visually note what dose is being dispensed or a number of doses
left in the inhaler. The dose indicia
44 can align with a dose reading aperture in the inhaler housing so that a user can
visually assess the dose indicia/information that is visible to a user when a respective
dose is indexed or is next to be indexed, to the dispensing position. Dose indicia
44 may also or alternatively be placed on the upper disk
50 and aligned with a dose reading aperture (
Figure 20), or on both upper and lower airway disks
50,
40, respectively.
Figure 18D illustrates that indicia 44 may be placed along the outer perimeter edge of the lower
surface of the lower disk
40, and numbered sequentially 1-60. In some embodiments, as shown in
Figure 20, the indicia
44 numbering can serially progress to alternate between rows of the dose containers
30 where the dose containers are opened in sequence in alternate rows,
e.g., number 1 on the outer row, number 2 on the inner row, number 3 on the outer row
(or vice versa) and so on. However, other dose numbering patterns may be used, depending
on the opening sequence (and the number of doses on the disk). That is, this numbering
may be appropriate where the inhaler is configured to open a dose container in one
row, then open an adjacent dose container in the other row (
e.g., inner to outer ring or outer to inner ring of dose containers), and repeating this
sequence serially, where two rows of dose containers are used. However, other embodiments
may open all the inner dose containers or all the outer dose containers, then open
the dose containers in the other row or use a different alternating pattern of opening
the dose containers on the inner and outer rows, and the dose numbering indicia on
the disk
40 and/or
50 can be presented accordingly.
[0071] Figure 5A illustrates an example of an upper airway disk
50. In this embodiment, the upper airway disk
50 is shown inverted from its normal use position (and inverted relative to the orientation
shown in
Figure 2A). As shown, the disk
50 defines a plurality of circumferentially spaced apart channels
51. For the staggered concentric dose container configuration, the disk
50 can include alternating long and short airway channels
52, 53, respectively. Each channel
51 includes opposing end portions
51a, 51b, the closed or substantially closed portion
51a is typically positioned adjacent the dose container
30c. The intake and flow can be in either direction and the open end
51b can be configured to face either the inner or outer perimeter of the disk
50 (
e.g., be either positioned radially innermost or radially outermost). The other (open)
end portion
51b merges into and/or is positioned adjacent the exit flow path port
10p and/or mouthpiece
10m and/or make-up air port or channel. The channels
51 include downwardly expending sidewalls
51w with adjacent pairs of the long and short channels sharing one of the sidewalls
51w. Optionally, as shown by the broken line with respect to feature
48 in
Figure 5A, one or all of the channels
51 can include a small, (air) bleed hole
48 (shown with only a few channels for ease of illustration) that allows air to enter
but is sized to inhibit dry powder from exiting therefrom.
[0072] As also shown in
Figure 5A, each channel
51 can include an aperture
55 that is configured to reside over (aligned with) a respective dose container
30c with the upper sealant layer
36 of the dose container
30c residing under the aperture
55. The apertures
55 allow a piercing (
e.g., slicing or puncturing) mechanism to extend through the aperture and open the sealant
layers
36, 37 (
Figure 3C)
. As shown in
Figure 5A, the upper disk
50 can also include one or more of indexing ribs
58 and/or inner perimeter gear teeth
59 or other features that can index the disk within the inhaler to rotate the disk to
provide the different dose container
30c to a dispensing position and/or position a piercing mechanism over the target dose
container for dispensing to open the dose container
30c. In other embodiments, one or both of these rotating and positioning mechanisms (or
different features) can be provided on the lower disk or the dose disk (not shown).
[0073] Figure 5B illustrates that the disk
50 can include three tabs
57 instead of four as shown in
Figure 5A (the lower airway disk
40 can also include three tabs instead of four in this embodiment,
see Figures 4B, 4C). One of the tabs
57 can have a vertically extending orientation rib
56, shown on an inner perimeter surface of the tab
57. The orientation rib
56 can be on the upper disk
50 and may be configured to cooperate with a piercing frame associated with the piercing
mechanism fixed in the inhaler housing so that the orientation rib
56 aligns to the frame to set a correct initial position according to dose number (
e.g., 1) and prevents indexing past the number of doses in the disk assembly
20. Stated differently, the orientation rib
56 cooperates with the inhaler housing or components attached thereto to set an initial
position of the disk assembly
20 and may also be used to stop the disk assembly from rotating around more than once
(
e.g., more than 360 degrees). In other embodiments, these functions can be provided by
alternate features or components such as the dose counter as described in co-assigned,
co-pending U.S. Application
US20100078021.
[0074] The indexing of the disk assembly
20 in the inhaler
10 can be about 6 degrees for every dose (about 6 degrees for each of 60 doses to arrive
at a single rotation of 360 degrees to dispense the 60 doses).
[0075] Figure 5B also illustrates that the apertures
55 can be configured with a geometry that corresponds to the shape of the piercer
100. The apertures
55 can be configured to closely surround the piercer
100 (
Figure 20). The piercer
100 can be a fluted piercer. As shown, the aperture
55 has three lobes
551 to snugly matably receive a correspondingly shaped three lobe (fluted) piercer
111 (
Figures 19C/19D). The fluted piercer can have other number of lobes, such as, for example four circumferentially
spaced apart lobes
111' as shown in
Figure 19F and the aperture
55 can have a corresponding four lobe shape. The lobes
551 can be in a different orientation in the inner row versus the outer row,
e.g., rotated 180 degrees (see also,
Figure 20).
[0076] Figures 2A and
6 illustrate the dose container assembly
20 integrally attached together.
Figures 2B, 4A, and
5A illustrate the exemplary disk components,
30, 40, 50. The tabs
57 of the disk
50 fit into spaces
49 of the disk
40 and the tabs
47 of the disk
40 fit into spaces
59 of the disk
50 with the crush ribs
47r (where used) firmly abutting the outer edges of tabs
57 to frictionally engage the components together with the dose disk
30 sandwiched therebetween with a flush fit via a relatively easy "press-fit" assembly
method. The dose container disk
30 is aligned with the upper and lower airway disks via the (radially outward extending)
tab
45 that engages one of the alignment notches
34 of the dose container ring
30 as discussed above. However, other alignment features or indicia may be used as well
as other attachment configurations.
[0077] The upper and lower airway disks
50, 40 (where both are used) can be attached to the dose container disk
30 or the upper and lower disks
50, 40 can be attached together with the dose container disk
30 therebetween so as to reduce any gaps in the airway path defined thereby. The disk
30 can be a stop for attachment features on the airway disks
40, 50. The disk
30 with the sealants
36,
37 can have-substantially planar upper and lower primary surfaces without requiring
any attachment features. The lower portion of the upper airway disk
50 and the upper portion of the lower airway disk
40 can snugly reside directly against the sealant
36, 37 on the respective opposing primary surfaces of the dose container disk
30 and/or against the primary surfaces of the dose disk
30 so that the attachment features/components are only on the upper and/or lower disks
50,40 allowing for a snug and sufficiently air-tight interface between the disks
30, 40, 50 without gaps created by tolerances in other build configurations. The press-fit attachment
without use of adhesives while providing for the substantially air-tight interface
can be advantageous and cost-effective. However, as noted above, other attachment
configurations may be used, including, for example, ultrasonic welding, adhesive,
laser weld, other friction fit and/or matable configurations, the use of seals (O-rings,
gaskets and the like) between the connection regions of the walls of the airway channels
facing the dose container
30c and the sealant layers
36, 37 over and/or under the dose containers
30c of the disk, including combinations thereof, and the like.
[0078] As shown in
Figures 7A-7C, in operation, pairs of upper and lower aligned and radially extending channels
41, 51 can reside one over and one under a respective dose container
30c and are in fluid communication via the opened dose container
30c and aperture
30a. That is, as shown in
Figure 7A, a piercing mechanism
100 advances to pierce the upper and lower sealant layers
36, 37, respectively (
Figures 2E, 3C). The piercing mechanism
100 can be configured to extend and remain in the lower airway channel or may (partially
or fully) retract before the dispensing after opening the lower sealant. Also, although
shown as extending down to pierce the sealant layers, the piercing mechanism
100 can be configured to extend upward from the bottom. Either way, in some embodiments,
the piercing mechanism
100 can be configured to occlude part of the aperture
30a and/or aperture
55 in the upper (or lower disk).
[0079] As shown in
Figure 7B, the piercing mechanism
100 can then partially or fully retract, or stay extended in the lower (or upper) airway
channel, depending on the configuration of the mechanism, but is typically configured
to plug and/or cooperate with a member that can plug the aperture
55 of the upper disk
50 (or lower disk
40 if piercing from the bottom) or otherwise occlude this passage
55 so that the piercing mechanism
100 and/or cooperating member substantially blocks, occludes (and/or seals) the aperture/opening
55 (
Figures 2A, 5A). In this way, if the inhaler is inserted, powder is prevented from spilling out
of the channel
51 because of the blockage provided by the piercing mechanism
100. The airflow path
10f may be any direction from above to below the dose container
30c or vice versa. The airflow path
10f that entrains the dry powder can extend from the inner perimeter to the outer perimeter
or vice versa.
Figures 7B, 20 illustrate an exemplary aiflow path
10f direction (shown by the arrow) to allow air to flow through in through the open end
of the bottom channel
41b on the outer perimeter of the disk assembly
20 up through the aperture
30a and out the open end
51b of the top channel
51 of the disk assembly
20 to the mouthpiece
10m. It is also noted. that the exit or inlet open end portions of the channels
41b, 51b may both face the inner perimeter rather than the outer perimeter of the disc assembly
20 as shown in
Figures 7A-7C (
see, e.g., Figure 17A).
[0080] After dispensing, the piercing mechanism
100 is fully retracted as shown in
Figure 7C and the dose container assembly
20 can be rotated to a dispensing position and/or the piercing mechanism
100 can be activated to open a different dose container
30c. In operation, the dose container assembly
20 can be radially pushed outward to seal or provide a snug exit flow path for the airway
channel
41 and/or
51 against an exit flowpath member
10fm,
e.g., that is or merges into the mouthpiece
10m.
[0081] Figure 17A illustrates that a seal
129, such as an O-ring may be used to provide a sufficiently air-tight path between the
airflow exit path
10/ (or short path
10s and/or mouthpiece
10m) and the disk assembly
20. Other disk to exit airpath seals or closure configurations may be used, examples
of which are discussed below:
[0082] In some embodiments, partial retraction of the piercer
100 can inhibit or prevent powder from falling out of the airway channel when the inhaler
10 is used in the inverted position. As shown, for example, in
Figures 17A and
17E, to facilitate this operation, clearance between the piercer head
100h and the access aperture
55 in the upper airway disk
50 can be small and/or snugly receive the piercer head
100h. The piercer mechanism
100 can also be configured to operate with a high level of positional accuracy so that
the piercer
100 aligns with and is able to cleanly enter the access aperture
55 of each dose container
30c held by the disk
30 (on each row, typically alternating between rows). In some embodiments, air leakage
at the joint
10j (
Figures 17A, 17E) between the fixed airway associated with the mouthpiece
10m and the rotating disk subassembly
20 can be reduced or eliminated to allow for consistent dose delivery and that leakage,
where present, is consistent dose to dose. As discussed with respect to
Figure 17A, the use of a compliant seal (
129) may allow this functionality. Also, the disk
20 can be biased toward the mouthpiece
10m as discussed above (
e.g., pushed radially toward the joint
10j/mouthpiece
10m).
[0083] Figures 17B-17E illustrate an embodiment of the inhaler
10 that can bias the disk assembly
20 toward the mouthpiece
10m using a lever assembly
80 that can facilitate an accurate, repeatable position of the disk assembly
20 for piercing, as well as control air leakage at the mouthpiece joint
10j. With regard to air leakage, embodiments of the inhaler provide a tight connection
that is temporally synchronized with the time of inhalation, while at other times,
e.g., during indexing of the disk assembly
20, the inhaler can allow a looser fit which facilitates rotation of the disk assembly
20 in the inhaler
10. In this embodiments, the mouthpiece
10m resides on the outer perimeter of the disk assembly
20 with the exit ports of the disk assembly
20 also residing on the outer perimeter of the disk assembly. In other embodiments,
the exit ports of the airway channels can be on the inner perimeter of the disk or
otherwise configured or located.
[0084] As shown in
Figure 17B, the lever assembly
80 includes a lever arm
81 that communicates with an upper surface of the upper airway disk
50 and extends down a distance to reside closely spaced to an outer perimeter of the
disk assembly
20. The lever assembly
80 also includes a finger
82 that resides above the disk assembly
20 and extends down toward the disk assembly
20. In the embodiment shown, the lever assembly
80 also includes a loading post
84 that resides proximate an outer perimeter of the disk assembly
20. The lever arm
81 includes a recess
83 that is configured to receive the finger
82. As the finger
82 resides in the recess
83, the post
84 post pushes the disk
20 radially inward to causes a tight joint
10j at the time of inhalation (
Figure 17E). The recess
83 can have an open perimeter shape and the finger
82 can slidably enter and exit therefrom. The lever arm
81 can define a ramp (inclined in the direction toward the recess
83) that slidably engages the finger
82 and directs the finger
82 to move toward the recess
83.
[0085] The lever assembly finger
82 is attached to lever
12n (also labeled as
10l in
Figure 1B) and rotates with respect to the frame
12 in the inhaler housing, typically upon user actuation of the lever
12n. When the lever
12n is returned from "actuated" (dosing) position, the finger
82 is pulled out of the recess
83 so that the disk assembly
20 is free to rotate to index to a next dispensing position.
[0086] Typically during inhalation, the loading post
84 resides radially opposite (substantially diametrically opposed to) the mouthpiece
10m. The lever arm
81 and post
84 do not rotate. This component is affixed to a frame
12 that is attached to the inhaler housing. The finger
82 rotates with respect to the frame
12 (and the lever arm
81).
[0087] As shown in
Figure 17B, the finger
82 does not contact the lever arm
81 during this portion of the stroke cycle of the lever assembly
80 to allow for free rotation during indexing.
Figure 17C illustrates the finger
82 moving toward the recess
83. Figure 17D illustrates the finger
82 in the recess
83 to bias the disk assembly
20 toward the exit flow path member
10fm. At the moment of inhalation, the finger
82 is advanced to its fullest extent of travel. Indexing (rotation) of the disk assembly
20 occurs while the finger
82 is elsewhere in its travel path. Therefore, as shown by the arrows in
Figure 17D, the lever assembly
80 can bias the disk assembly
20 while the finger
82 is at the far extent of travel to seal the joint
10j at the proper time (inhalation), while allowing free movement during indexing (typically
also unbiased the rest of the time).
[0088] It is recognized that, during manufacturing, there may be a tolerance-induced mismatch
between the diameters of the dose disk 30 and the upper airway disk
50 of the disk assembly
20. As shown in
Figure 17E, inner or outer sidewall surfaces (shown as outer sidewall surfaces) of both of these
disks,
30,
50 contact the mouthpiece
10m when the disk assembly
20 is biased against it. Thus, as shown in
Figure 17E a small relief
10r can be cut or otherwise formed into the proximate or abutting surface of the an exit
flowpath member
10fm (which may be the mouthpiece
10m) at a location that coincides with the dose disk
30 to assure that the upper airway disk
50, which has the greater amount of contact surface, is always the part to contact the
mouthpiece or exit flowpath member
10fm in communication with the mouthpiece
10m.
[0089] Figures 17F and
17G illustrate an alternate embodiment of a biasing mechanism
180 that can bias the disk assembly
20 toward the mouthpiece
10m during inhalation then releasing or disengaging to allow rotation of the disk assembly
20 for indexing. As discussed above, in some embodiments, the inhaler
10 can be configured to rotate the disk assembly
20 a defined angular rotation, such as about 6 degrees, to serially dispense or access
dose containers alternately on inner and outer rows. This biasing mechanism
180 can be configured to operate with the lever
10l similar to that discussed above with respect to the lever assembly
80 but may also be activated using other components or features.
[0090] As shown in
Figure 17F, the biasing mechanism
180 can include a post
182 that resides proximate an inner perimeter of the dose container disk assembly
20. The post
182 can reside in a circumferentially extending slot
182s having an end portion that merges into a slot portion
183 that extends radially outward toward the inner perimeter of the dose disk assembly
20. During and/or just prior to release of the medicament to a user for inhalation (
e.g., "dosing"), the post
182 travels in slot
182s until it reaches slot portion
183 whereby the post pushes (typically indirectly) against the inner perimeter of the
disk assembly
20 to bias the disk assembly
20 toward the mouthpiece
10m (as shown by the arrow). The inhaler is shown upside down from normal orientation
in
Figure 17F.
[0091] Figure 17G illustrates that the post
182 can communicate with a stationary post
182b on an indexing plate or frame
184. In the embodiment shown, the biasing post
182 is configured to contact and push against post
182b causing post
182b to flex radially outward against the dose container assembly
20. The two posts
182, 182b can be configured to project toward each other, one upwardly and one downwardly,
with the post
182b typically residing closer to an inner perimeter of the dose disk assembly
20.
[0092] The post
182 is typically attached to or in communication with the lever
10l which is accessible by a user. However, the post
182 can be in communication with other mechanisms that cause the post
182 to move in the slot
182s and bias the disk assembly
20 toward the mouthpiece
10m.
[0093] As shown in
Figure 17G, the indexing plate
184 can reside under gears
109g that are associated with the indexer
109. The rotatable gears
109g can be held on mounts
110 on a frame member
109f as shown in
18E. Generally stated, the gears
109g communicate with teeth
109t on indexing post
109p (that can be part of a ramp disk
209,
Figure 18F) and gear teeth
59a on the disk assembly
20 (
e.
g., as shown, on the lower disk
40). Turning the indexing post
109p turns gears
109g which, in turn, indexes the disk assembly
20. The other gear teeth
59b (residing closer to the bottom of the inhaler housing) can communicate with indexing
control arms
109r as shown in
Figure 18D which can help more precisely turn the dose container assembly a desired rotational
amount. Note that
Figures 18D and
18E illustrate the inhaler in an inverted orientation from that of normal use.
Figure 18F shows the inhaler in a "normal" use orientation with the dose disk assembly
20 below the piercer mechanism
100 as also shown, for example, in
Figure 18C. The piercer
100 can be in communication with a ramp disk
209 with fin-like ramps
211 as shown in
Figure 18F. In the embodiment shown, the ramp disk
209 cooperates with the piercers
100a, 100b to push the respective piercer
100a or
100b into the respective dose containers
30c. The post
182 is typically attached to the lever
10l such as shown in
Figure 17F, 18E and
18F which is accessible by a user. However, the post
182 can be in communication with other mechanisms that cause the post to move in the
slot
182s and bias the disk assembly
20 toward the mouthpiece
10m.
[0094] The indexing mechanism
109 shown in
Figures 17F and
17G is discussed further below with respect to
Figures 18C-18F. However, other indexing configurations can be used.
[0095] Figure 19A illustrates one embodiment of a piercing mechanism
100 with a corkscrew piercer
110. In operation the corkscrew moves up and down vertically straight, typically without
rotation, to create a desired opening shape (e..g., circular) through the sealant
layers
36, 37. In other embodiments, the corkscrew may rotate during extension and/or dispensing.
In the embodiment shown, the corkscrew piercer
110 can remain in the lower channel
41 while the dry powder is dispensed in the airflow path and the blockage of the aperture
30a can be provided by a resilient member
120 that is mounted on the corkscrew
110 and moves up and down therewith. The piercing mechanism
100 can have a two stage operation, fully up (for indexing) and fully down. The most
forward portion of the corkscrew can have a point with a configuration that creates
a desired cutting configuration into the sealant (
e.g., foil). In some embodiments, the corkscrew piercer
110 can cut a shape with a tab into the sealant
36,
37, then fold the tab down to release the dry powder. Positioning the corkscrew piercer
110 in the channel
41 during dispensing may provide improved aerodynamics or shear or impaction flow turbulence
for the dry powder. The resilient member
120 can comprise a foam block or other resilient member
120 (such as a hard or rigid member biased by a spring) that can be used to seal or plug
the aperture
30a. Figure 19B illustrates a similar corkscrew piercer
110 that is used with a disk assembly
20 having both upper and lower airway disks
50,
40. A resilient and/or flexible member
100p such as a polymeric and/or elastomeric or foam plug can be used to occlude or seal
the disk aperture
55.
[0096] Figures 19C and
19D illustrate a piercing mechanism
100 with a fluted solid piercer
111. The flute may have a straight flute configuration or the flute can have a twist
or partial twist along it length,
e.g., for a twist configuration, the maxima and minima of the lobes can change axially
along the length of the flute. The flute can have a cross section with a plurality
of lobes, typically three or four lobes, shown as three lobes in
Figure 19C. The fluted configuration may extend only a partial forward length and merge into
a constant diameter segment that resides in and helps occlude or seal the aperture
55 as shown in
Figure 19E. In other embodiments, the solid or fluted piercer configuration can merge into a
cap or plug
100p that resides over and/or in the aperture
55 (see,
e.g.,
Figure 19C). In some embodiments, the twisted flute
111 can remain in the dose container aperture
30 and/or lower disk
40 during dispensing which may facilitate turbulence and/or compaction in the airway.
[0097] Figure 19D illustrates that the fluted piercer
111 can rotate as it pierces the foil or other sealant material to form a round hole
or may be extended straight without rotation. In other embodiments, the fluted piercer
111 can be extended or advanced without rotation to pierce the sealant layer(s)
36, 37. Figure 19E illustrates that the fluted piercer
111' can include a fluted forward portion
111f with a length "L
1" that merges into a solid portion
112 that can have a substantially circular cross-section with a length "L
2". L
1 is typically longer than L
2. L
1 can have a length sufficient to allow the forward fluted portion
111f to reside in the dose container aperture
30a (typically just below the lower sealant line or in-line with or slightly above or
below the lower surface of the disk
30) and in or through the lower sealant
37 at the same time, with the solid portion engaging the airway disk aperture
55.
[0098] Figure 19G illustrates a piercing mechanism
100 that can include a plug
100p (similar to that shown in
Figure 19B for the corkscrew configuration) that can occlude the passage
55. The plug
100p can be used with any piercer, including the corkscrew
110 (
Figure 19A) or the solid fluted piercer
111 (
Figure 19B) or other piercer configuration. The piercing head can remain in the lower channel
41 during dispensing as shown in
Figure 19E, or the piercer may retract partially through a passage in the plug (not shown) while
leaving the plug
100p in position against and/or over the aperture or passage
55.
[0099] In some embodiments, the fluted piercer
111 can be configured with lobes that twist along its length (
Figure 19D). For example, the fluted piercer
111 can have about 60 degrees of twist along its length such that the lobes of the fluted
piercer turn about its circumference. During a straight piercing stroke (straight
into and through the sealant), the twisted fluted piercer
111 can make a fully round hole in the sealant
36 and/or
37.
[0100] Figure 20 illustrates substantially U-shaped airpaths that may be created by the disk assembly
20. The "U" shape is created by the upper disk channel
51 and the lower disk channel
41 defining the long sides of the "U" which extend in a radial direction across the
disk body. As shown, in this embodiment, the outer perimeter of the disk assembly
20 holds both the outlet and an inlet for the airflow path
10f. The "U" shaped flow path (or, in some embodiment, a" partial "U" where only a one
of the airflow disks
40,
50 is used) can function as a powder deagglomerator. The particles impact the opposing
wall of the airway disk channel
51 as they exit the dose container
30c with sufficient force to deagglomerate the drug powder.
[0101] Figure 20 also illustrates an example of dry powder particle trajectories
10d entrained in air flow associated with the inspiratory airflow path
10f. After the dry powder exits the dose container
30c in the airflow path
10f, the air flow and smaller, powder particles (
10f) in the air are able to make the about 90 degree turn while heavier dry powder particles
(
10d) bounce off the inner wall
51w of the upper airway disk channel
51 with increasingly shallow angles eventually going more or less straight out of the
mouthpiece
10m. The impact of the heavier dry powder against the walls
51w helps deagglomerate the dry powder. Referring again to
Figure 5A, in the dual row dose container
30 embodiments, the channels,
51 vary in length depending on if the dose container
30 is on the inner or outer row.
[0102] In some particular embodiments, the airway channels
41, 51 can include alternating short and long channels (see,
e.g.,
Figure 5A). The length of the long channel (the channels with the dose container on the inner
perimeter where the outer perimeter is the exit location and vice versa if the inner
perimeter is the exit location) can between about 5 mm to about 15 mm, typically about
10 mm, the length of the short channel can be between about 3-10 mm, typically about
5 mm, e.g., about 40-70% the length of the long channel. The depth (vertical height)
of each channel
41, 51 can be the same or can, in some embodiments vary. Exemplary depths of the channels
41, 51 are between about 1 mm to about 3 mm, typically about 2 mm, but other depths can
be used.
[0103] The inhaler
10 can include a user-accessible actuator such as a lever, knob, switch, slider, crank,
pushbutton or other mechanical and/or electromechanical device that can index the
dose ring or disk
30 to rotate the assembly
20 to place one or more dose containers
30c (
Figure 2B) in a dispensing position in an inhalation chamber in fluid communication with the
inhalation port
10p (
Figure 1B) and/or cause a piercing mechanism
100 (
Figures 7A-7C) to open a dose container
30c in the front row, then the back row (or vice versa) to release medicament to an inhalation
air flow path for inhalation by a user (as will be discussed further below). To release
the powder for inhalation, the sealed dose container
30c is opened and connected to an airway
41 and/or
51 which is in turn connected to an exit flowpath member
10fm which can be the inhaler mouthpiece
10m (
see,
e.g.,
Figures 7A-7C, 17A, 17E, 18A) or can merge into the inhaler mouthpiece
10m After the drug falls into the channel
41 or
51 (depending on which orientation the inhaler is in), this is a "used" channel and
the drug therein is either delivered (if the user inhales properly and timely) or
isolated (if the user does not inhale and closes the mouthpiece or otherwise causes
the indexing of the disk assembly
20), and the "used" channel is indexed with the opened dose container
30c so that it cannot be used again or so that it is used again for only the other dose
container in the shared channel (as discussed with respect to
Figure 2C). Any powder remaining in the opened dose container is separated from the airway
when the next dose container is indexed into position.
[0104] In some embodiments, the portion of the airway provided by the airway channel
41 or
51 adjacent to each dose container
30c is unique to that individual dose container
30c. In this way, any spillage of powder into the airway will only be available to the
mouthpiece and user as long as that dose container is indexed into connection with
the primary (mouthpiece) airway. Indexing to the next dose container will also index
the adjacent airway section out of connection with the active inhalation airway path,
taking any spilled and/or accumulated powder with it.
[0105] Figures 8A and
8B illustrate another embodiment of an inhaler
10. In this embodiment, the upper airway channel
51 can be configured as a "sink trap"
51t path that has a portion of the airflow path that rises and then turns down or vice
versa. That is, as shown, the path
51t can rise above the aperture
30a, then turn to extend downwardly for a distance to provide additional spill resistance
of the dry powder from the airway/inhaler. Similarly, the lower airway channel
41 can be configured to rise upward a distance downstream of the dose container aperture
30a to form a "sink trap"
41t path. In some embodiments, only one of the airway disks (
e.
g, the upper or the lower
50, 40) have a sink trap path while in others, both disks
40, 50 have airway configurations with sink traps
41t,
51t at shown. The dose container assembly
20 has an aligned channel pair
41, 51 that are in fluid communication once the respective dose container is opened
30c that reside under and over the respective dose container
30c and have the sink trap configurations
41t,
51t to that cooperate to form a curvilinear airflow path (
e.g., a generally "S" shape, with the "S" layed on its side). The airflow path
10f can extend either from the outer perimeter toward the inner perimeter or from the
inner perimeter toward the outer perimeter.
[0106] As also shown in
Figures 8A and 8B, in this embodiment, the piercing mechanism
100 can include two piercing members
100a, 100b, one dedicated to opening the first row of dose containers
30c and another for the second row of dose containers
30c.
[0107] Figures 9A-9C and
10-14 illustrate an exemplary inhaler configuration with upper and lower airways forming
a sink trap
51t, 41t airflow path according to embodiments of the present invention. As shown, the piercing
mechanism
100 can include the two piercing members
100a, 100b mounted on a housing that slides over the dose container assembly
20'. The dose container assembly
20'. can rotate under the piercing mechanism
100 as a respective dose container(s)
30c is indexed to a dispensing position. Similarly, the dose container assembly
20' can rotate above the piercing mechanism if the piercing mechanism is below the dose
container assembly
20, 20'.
[0108] Figures 10, 12 and
14 illustrate that the lower airway disk
40 can include two components, an upper member
40u and a lower member
40l that attach to define the curvilinear sink trap paths
41t. Similarly, the upper airway disk
50 can include two components, an upper member
50u and a lower member
50i that attach to define the curvilinear sink trap paths
51t. In particular embodiments, the dry powder can be provided as a pre-measured amount
of dry powder
200 and sealed in the aperture
30a between the sealant layers
36, 37. As shown in
Figure 10, the upper member
50u can include a tab
150t that engages a slot
150s in the lower member
50l of the airway disk
50 for alignment and/or attachment.
[0109] Figure 12 illustrates a dose container
30c on the outer row
31 being opened with the piercing member
100b and the associated curvilinear airflow path
41t, 51t. Figure 14 illustrates the piercing member
100a in position to open a dose container
30c on the inner row
32 with the associated airflow path
41t, 51t.
[0110] Figures 15A, 15B and
16 illustrate an example of a dose container disk or ring
30 with two rows of apertures
30a used for dose containers
30c. The dose container disk
30 can be relatively thin, such as about 2-4 mm thick. The dose container apertures
30a can be configured so that the inner row
32 is at least about 2 mm from the outer row
31 and so that the inner and outer rows of dose containers are spaced inward from the
respective perimeters by about 2 mm. This spacing can provide sufficient moisture
permeability resistance and/or oxygen resistance.
[0111] Figure 17A illustrates on embodiment of an inhaler
10 with a long exit air path
10l compared to the shorter flow path in
Figure 18A. In this embodiment, the airway disks can orient the channels
41, 51 so that the open ends
41b, 51b face and open to the inside of the disk rather than the outside.
Figure 17A also illustrates that the dose container disk
30 can be configured with blisters
130.
[0112] Figure 17A also illustrates that the piercing mechanism
100 can comprise a rotating piercer head
102 configured to pierce a dose container
30c on the inner row, then rotate to pierce the adjacent one
30c on the outer row.
[0113] Figure 18A illustrates that the inhaler
10 can be configured with a piercing mechanism
100 that moves radially to open a dose container
30c in one row then move radially inward or radially outward to open a dose container
30c in the other row. The dose container assembly
20 and/or one or more of the airway disks
40, 50 and dose container disk
30 can also be configured to axially or otherwise bias (together or individually) with
a wall or walls of an exit airflow path to provide a sufficiently tight seal, such
as discussed above.
Figures 18A, 18B also illustrate that the inhaler
10 can include an indexing mechanism
109 that cooperates with the gear teeth
59 on the inner perimeter of the upper disk
50. Other indexing mechanism may be used to rotate the assembly
20 to place the different dose containers
30c in the dispensing position.
[0114] Figure 18C illustrates that the inhaler
10 can be configured with a piercing mechanism
100 that has two piercers
100a, 100b, one that pierces dose containers on the inner row and the other that pierces/opens
dose containers on the outer row. Typically, the piercing mechanism
100 is configured so that a dose container on the outer or inner row is pierced, then
a dose container on the opposite row is pierced. The piercers
100a, 100b can reciprocate up and down to open the respective dose container. The dose container
assembly
20 and/or one or more of the airway disks
40, 50 and dose container disk
30 can also be configured to axially or otherwise bias (together or individually) with
a wall or walls of an exit airflow path to provide a sufficiently tight seal.
[0115] Figures 18C-18E also illustrate that the inhaler
10 can include an indexing mechanism
109 with gears
109g that cooperate with an indexing post
109p and the disk assembly
20 gear teeth
59a can reside on the inner perimeter of the lower disk
40. Figure 18D is shown inverted from the normal use orientation shown in
Figure 18C. Figure 18C-18E also show that the lower airway disk
40 can include two proximately stacked layers of gear teeth
59a, 59b, one of which
59a cooperates with the post
109p and associated indexing gears
109g and the other of which
59b can provide more precise positioning using arms
109r as shown in
Figure 18D. Other indexing mechanisms may be used to rotate the assembly
20 to place the different dose containers
30c in the dispensing position. The dual piercers
100a, 100b can cooperate with ramp surfaces on ramp disk
209. The ramp disk
209 can have circumferentially offset fins
211 on two concentric rows that force the respective piercers down in response to contact
with the fins. Additional description of the indexer and dual piercer are provided
in co-pending, co-assigned U.S. Patent Application
US20100078021.
[0116] In some embodiments, the mouthpiece port
10p and an air inlet port (not shown) may be spaced apart about a distance of between
about 12-127 mm (about 0.5-5 inches). The inhaler
10 may have a relatively short air intake airpath (measured from where an air intake
is disposed to the inhalation port
10p), such as between about 12-25.4 mm such as shown in
Figures 7A-7C, 18A and
18C, or a longer air path such as shown in
Figure 17A, typically between about 50-127 mm (about 2-5 inches). The shorter air path can be
defined to include a short tubular air path extending between the dry powder release
location and the inhalation mouthpiece with a turbulence promoter segment that inhibits
agglomeration that merges into the inhaler mouthpiece (not shown). The longer air
path may extend across a major portion or substantially all of a width or length of
the inhaler body. The inner surfaces/shape of the flow path can be polygonal to facilitate
a cyclonic air stream to bounce off the inner surfaces which act as impact surfaces.
For additional discussion of suitable turbulence promoter configurations, see
PCT/US2005/032492, entitled, Dry Powder Inhalers That Inhibit Agglomeration, Related Devices and Methods.
[0117] The inhaler
10 can have a body that is a portable, relatively compact "pocket-sized" configuration.
In some embodiments, the inhaler body can have a width/length that is less than about
115 mm (about 4.5 inches), typically less than about 89 mm (about 3.5 inches), and
a thickness/depth of less than about 51 mm (about 2 inches), typically less than about
38 mm (about 1.5 inches). The inhaler body can also be configured to be generally
planar on opposing primary surfaces to facilitate pocket storage.
[0118] The inhaler can include a circuit that can control certain operations of the inhaler
10. The inhaler
10 can include a computer port (not shown). The port may be, for example, an RS 232
port, an infrared data association (IrDA) or universal serial bus (USB), which may
be used to download or upload selected data from/to the inhaler to a computer application
or remote computer, such as a clinician or other site. The inhaler
10 can be configured to via a wired or wireless communication link (one-way or two-way)
to be able to communicate with a clinician or pharmacy for reorders of medicines and/or
patient compliance. The inhaler
10 may also include a second-peripheral device communication port (not shown). The inhaler
10 may be able to communicate via the Internet, telephone, cell phone or other electronic
communication protocol.
[0119] In some embodiments, the circuit can include computer program code and/or computer
applications that communicate additional data to a user (optionally to the display)
as noted above and/or communicate with another remote device (the term "remote" including
communicating with devices that are local but typically not connected during normal
inhalant use).
[0120] In some embodiments, the circuit can be in communication with a vibrator device (not
shown). The vibrator device can be any suitable vibrator mechanism. The vibrator device
can be configured to vibrate the dry powder in the airflow path. In some embodiments,
the vibrator device can comprise a transducer that is configured to vibrate the opened
cartridge(s) holding the dry powder. Examples of vibrator devices include, but are
not limited to, one or more of: (a) ultrasound or other acoustic or sound-based sources
(above, below or at audible wavelength) that can be used to instantaneously apply
non-linear pressure signals onto the dry powder; (b) electrical or mechanical vibration
of the walls (sidewalls, ceiling and/or floor) of the inhalation flow channel, which
can include magnetically induced vibrations and/or deflections (which can use electromagnets
or permanent field magnets); (c) solenoids, piezoelectrically active portions and
the like; and (d) oscillating or pulsed gas (airstreams), which can introduce changes
in one or more of volume flow, linear velocity, and/or pressure. Examples of mechanical
and/or electro-mechanical vibratory devices are described in
U.S. Patent Nos. 5,727,607,
5,909,829 and
5,947,169. Combinations of different vibrating mechanisms can also be used.
[0121] In some embodiments, the vibrator device can include a commercially available miniature
transducer from Star Micronics (Shizuoka, Japan), having part number QMB-105PX. The
transducer can have resonant frequencies in the range of between about 400-600 Hz.
[0122] In certain embodiments, the inhaler
10 can include visible indicia (flashing light or display "error" or alert) and/or can
be configured to provide audible alerts to warn a user that a dose was properly (and/or
improperly) inhaled or released from the inhaler. For example, certain dry powder
dose sizes are formulated so that it can be difficult for a user to know whether they
have inhaled the medicament (typically the dose is aerosolized and enters the body
with little or no taste and/or tactile feel for conformation). Thus, a sensor (not
shown) can be positioned in communication with the flow path in an inhaler and configured
to be in communication with a digital signal processor or microcontroller, each held
in or on the inhaler. In operation, the sensor can be configured to detect a selected
parameter, such as a difference in weight, a density in the exiting aerosol formulation,
and the like, to confirm that the dose was released.
[0123] The sealed dose containers
30c can be configured so that the water vapor transmission rate can be less than about
1.0g/100in
2/24hours, typically less than about 0.6 g/100in
2/24hours and an oxygen transmission rate that is suitable for the dry powder held
therein. The dose container assemblies
20, 20' can be configured with a stable shelf life of between about 1-5 years, typically
about 4 years.
[0124] The dose containers
30c can have a volume (prior to filling and sealing) that is less than about 24 mm
3, typically between 5-15 mm
3. The powder bulk density can be about 1 g/cm
3 while the power nominal density when filled (for reference) can be about 0.5 g/cm
3. The maximum compression of a drug by filling and sealing in the dose container
30c can be less than about 5 %, typically less than about 2 %. The maximum heating of
drug during the filling and sealing can be maintained to a desirable level so as not
to affect the efficacy of the drug or the formulation.
[0125] Figure 21 illustrates exemplary operations that can be used to operate an inhaler according
to embodiments of the present invention. The device can be configured to have an automated
three-stage operation at actuation to inhibit overdose delivery, e.g., it can serially:
(a) pierce the sealant layers, (b) release the drug (typically followed close in time
by delivery to a user), and (c) index to the next (unopened) dose container (thus
isolating or closing any exit route for the released dry powder if not inhaled); or
(a) index to a target dose container (thus isolating an earlier opened airway channel),
(b) pierce the sealant layers and (c) release drug or dry powder from the opened dose
container. A dose container ring having a staggered concentric arrangement of dose
container apertures sealed by upper and lower sealant layers defining dose containers
and attached to an underlying disk with a plurality of circumferentially spaced apart
airway channels, one for each dose container, is provided (block
300). The dose container with the underlying disk is rotated to a dispensing position
in the inhaler (block
310). The indexing can rotate the dose disk assembly about 6 degrees, repeated about
60 times to access 30 dose containers on the inner row and 30 dose containers on the
outer row while rotating only about 360 degrees. The airway channel associated with
the released dry powder is isolated from the inhalation path so that the used airflow
channel is not used for any subsequent inhalation delivery or is used only one more
time (block
325).
[0126] In some embodiments, a piercing mechanism is advanced to open both sealant layers
and release dry powder from the dose container in the dispensing position to the underlying
airway channel (block
320). The piercing mechanism can either remain extended or can be partially or fully
retracted with the piercing mechanism or cooperating member thereof occluding the
opening to the upper airway channel. In some embodiments, the piercing mechanism can
be partially retracted, leaving at least a forward portion in the respective dose
container aperture to occlude and/or plug the aperture. The isolating step can be
in response to and/or after either the step of fully retracting the piercing mechanism
from the dose container aperture (block
350) or the rotating step (block
310) or both.
[0127] The method can also optionally include flowably directing the released dry powder
to a user via the airway channel.
[0128] Figure 22 illustrates exemplary fabrication operations that can be used to assemble a dose
container assembly according to embodiments of the present invention. As shown, a
dose container disk (block
400) with circumferentially spaced apart through apertures is provided. At least one
sealant layer is attached to the upper or lower primary surface of the disk over or
under the dose container apertures (block
410) (e.g., a continuous layer or strips or small pieces of sealant layers can be positioned
over the apertures). The dose container apertures are filled with dry powder (noting
"filled" does not require volumetrically full) (block
420). Typically, the powder is filled to between about 30-75% volume. The sealant layer
can be attached to the other primary surface of the dose disk to provide sealed dose
containers (block
430). The dose container disk can be placed between upper and lower airway disks (block
440). The dose containers can be aligned with circumferentially spaced apart airway channels
on the airway disks so that each dose container is in communication with a different
one of the airway channels in both the upper and lower disks (block
450). The upper and lower disks can be attached to hold the dose container disk therebetween
to provide a dose container assembly (block
460).
[0129] The following exemplary claims are presented in the specification to support one
or more devices, features, and methods of embodiments, of the present invention. While
not particularly listed below, Applicant preserves the right to claim other features
shown or described in the application including, by way of example, one or more of
the following in any combination with any features or depending from or in lieu of
any of the original claims.
[0130] The dose container assembly can include two or more stacked disks. The stacked disks
can reside under or over one airway disk or between a pair of airway disks.
[0131] A dry powder dose container assembly, wherein there are 30 dose container apertures
in the first row and 30 dose container apertures in the second row, and wherein the
first airway disk airway channels include alternating channels of different radial
lengths, one length corresponding to channels extending from an inner or outer perimeter
of the airway disk to dose containers in the first row and the other length corresponding
to channels extending from an inner or outer perimeter of the airway disk to dose
container apertures on the second row.
[0132] A dry powder dose container assembly, wherein the first airway disk is attached to
the dose container disk to be able to rotate therewith, and wherein the airway channels
extend radially across the first airway disk and are positioned relative to the dose
container disk so that at least one airway channel is aligned with at least one dose
container.
[0133] A dry powder dose container assembly in combination with an inhaler, wherein the
inhaler comprises an inhaler body with an inhalation port and a piercing mechanism,
wherein in operation, the piercing mechanism is configured to travel through the airway
disk aperture in the first airway disk, pierce the first and second sealant layers,
enter, then remain in or retract from at least the second disk airway channel, while
occluding the first airway disk aperture.
[0134] The inhaler is configured to index/pierce/deliver or pierce/deliver/index to isolate
the upper and lower airway channels corresponding to an opened dose container from
an inhalation path.
[0135] The dose container disk includes a first row of circumferentially spaced apart apertures
at a first radius and a second row of circumferentially spaced apart apertures at
a second radius so that the first and second rows are concentric with respect to a
center of the disk, and wherein the piercing mechanism includes first and second piercers,
the first piercer configured to pierce the sealant over and under the respective dose
container apertures in the first row, and the second piercer configured to pierce
the sealant over and under the respective dose container apertures in the second row.
[0136] The piercer mechanism is configured to serially alternate between rows to pierce
the sealants over and under a dose container in a first row of dose container apertures,
then pierce the sealants over and under a dose container in a second row of dose container
apertures.
[0137] The piercing mechanism comprises a fluted piercer configured to pierce the sealants.
[0138] The fluted piercer comprises three or four lobes, and wherein the first airway disk
apertures have a corresponding three or four lobe perimeter shape.
[0139] An inhaler with a piercing mechanism that comprises a solid piercer.
[0140] An inhaler having a circular dose container disk having a plurality of circumferentially
spaced apart dry powder chambers; and a first airway disk residing above or below
the dose container disk, the airway disk comprising a plurality of circumferentially
spaced apart radially oriented airway channels, wherein one airway channel is aligned
with one of the dose containers and defines an airflow path in which airflow passes
through one or more 90 degree turns with dry powder entrained therein after exiting
a respective dose container to thereby inhibit agglomeration.
[0141] A dry powder inhaler, comprising:
an inhaler body with an inhalation port;
a dose container assembly held in the inhaler body, the dose container assembly comprising
a dose container disk having a plurality of circumferentially spaced apart apertures,
and a lower airway disk having a plurality of airway channels with upwardly extending
sidewalls residing under the dose container disk, each of the lower airway channels
being in communication with at least one dose container aperture, whereby the lower
airway disk channels define a plurality of spaced apart inhalation delivery paths
that individually communicate with the inhalation port;
a dose container opening mechanism in the inhaler body configured to open a dose container
in a dispensing position in the inhaler; and
an indexing mechanism in the inhaler body configured to rotate the dose container
assembly into the dispensing position.
[0142] A dry powder inhaler, comprising:
an inhaler body with an inhalation port;
a dose container assembly held in the inhaler body, the dose container assembly comprising:
a dose container disk having opposing upper and lower primary surfaces and a plurality
of circumferentially spaced apart apertures with first and second sealant layers attached
to the upper and lower primary surfaces of the dose container disk to define a respective
floor and ceiling of the dose container apertures to form sealed dose containers holding
dry powder therein;
an upper airway disk residing over the dose container disk, the upper airway disk
comprising a plurality of circumferentially spaced apart airway channels with downwardly
extending sidewalls; and
a lower airway disk residing under the dose container disk, the lower airway disk
comprising a plurality of circumferentially spaced apart airway channels with upwardly
extending sidewalls, wherein pairs of the lower airway disk channels and the upper
airway disk channels are aligned with at least one corresponding dose container therebetween;
a dose container opening mechanism configured to open a dose container in a dispensing
position in the inhaler; and
an indexing mechanism configured to rotate the dose container assembly into the dispensing
position.
[0143] The upper airway disk optionally includes circumferentially spaced apart apertures,
one residing over a corresponding dose container, wherein the opening mechanism comprises
a piercing head that is configured to pierce the first and second sealant layers.
The dose container apertures are optionally arranged in a staggered concentric configuration
of inner and outer rows.
[0144] The piercing head is configured to occlude or seal a respective upper airway disk
aperture during inhalation.
[0145] The opening mechanism comprises a member that is configured to substantially seal
the upper airway disk aperture during an inhalation.
[0146] A method of operating an inhaler, comprising:
providing a dose container ring having staggered concentric dose container apertures
sealed by upper and lower sealant layers over and under the apertures to define sealed
dose containers attached to at least one of an underlying or overlying airway disk
having a plurality of circumferentially spaced apart airway channels, at least one
dose container for each airway channel;
rotating the dose container ring and at least one airway disk together to present
a respective dose container and a corresponding airway channel to a dispensing position
in the inhaler;
advancing a piercing mechanism to open both sealant layers and release dry powder
from the dose container to the corresponding airway channel;
delivering the released dose of the dry powder to a user via inhalation; and
isolating the airway channel associated with the released dry powder from an inhalation
flow path so that the channel is reused only once or is not used for any subsequent
inhalation delivery.
[0147] The method can optionally also include partially or fully retracting the piercing
mechanism, while leaving at least a forward portion of the piercing mechanism in an
airway disk aperture associated with the airway disk during the delivering step.
[0148] The method can include fully retracting the piercing mechanism from the airway disk
aperture after the delivering step.
[0149] The isolating step can be carried out in response to the fully retracting step by
automatically indexing the dose container ring when the piercing mechanism is fully
retracted.
[0150] The isolating step can be carried out in response to opening or closing a cover associated
with the inhaler by automatically indexing the dose container ring upon opening or
closing the cover.
[0151] The method can include flowably directing the released dry powder to a user via inhalation
out of a mouthpiece from the airway channel associated with the released dry powder
before the fully retracting step.
[0152] The sealed dose containers can be arranged in staggered concentric front and back
rows, and wherein the indexing and advancing steps are carried out to serially open
one dose container on the front row then one dose container on the back row.
[0153] A dry powder inhaler, comprising:
a circular dose container disk assembly having a plurality of circumferentially spaced
apart radially oriented airway channels aligned with a plurality of circumferentially
spaced apart sealed drug chambers with dry powder therein held in first and second
concentric rows of different radius, wherein prior to active dispensing, the airway
channels are drug free, and wherein one end of the airway channels define exit flow
paths that are in communication with a mouthpiece;
a mouthpiece configured to rotatably engage an outer perimeter of the dose container
disk to serially communicate with the airway channels to entrain dry powder from an
opened drug chamber to deliver dry powder to a user;
a piercing mechanism configured to open the dose container chambers to release the
dry powder therein; and
an indexing mechanism in communication with the circular dose disk.
[0154] A dry powder inhaler comprising a circular dose container disk with a plurality of
circumferentially spaced apart dosing chambers and a plurality of circumferentially
spaced apart radially oriented airway channels, one aligned with one or more dosing
chambers, wherein during inhalation air exits the inhaler with the dry powder entrained
therein along a radius associated with a respective airway channel.
[0155] The foregoing is illustrative of the present invention and is not to be construed
as limiting thereof. Although a few exemplary embodiments of this invention have been
described, those skilled in the art will readily appreciate that many modifications
are possible in the exemplary embodiments without materially departing from the novel
teachings and advantages of this invention. In the claims, means-plus-function clauses,
where used, are intended to cover the structures described herein as performing the
recited function. Therefore, it is to be understood that the foregoing is illustrative
of the present invention and is not to be construed as limited to the specific embodiments
disclosed. The invention is defined by the following claims.