Title of Invention

PHARMACEUTICAL TABLETS HAVING A RELATIVELY INACTIVE SEGMENT

Abstract An immediate release drug containing pharmaceutical tablet adapted for accurate breaking which has two or more segments with at least one segment containing a drug.
Full Text PHARMACEUTICAL TABLETS HAVING A RELATIVELY INACTIVE SEGMENT
FIELD OF THE INVENTION
The invention involves layered immediate release
pharmaceutical tablets comprising a layer containing a drug
and a layer either lacking a drug or containing said drug
as part of a different granulation, such as in a less
concentrated form.
BACKGROUND
The invention derives from the need to solve two related
problems within the pharmaceutical industry. One is that
immediate release pharmaceutical tablets are commonly
broken, and are often produced with a score to aid
breaking, but that tablet breaking is well-documented to
suffer many problems, some of which are delineated below.
The second problem is that combination drug products are
typically produced as homogeneous mixtures or as capsules,
so that a physician prescribing these products, such as to
treat arterial hypertension, is limited in adjusting the
dose of only one of said combination.
Documentation of the importance of the first problem is
summarized as follows:
Many drugs require dosage adjustments, such as warfarin,
the scored tablets of which are frequently broken. These
dosage adjustments through tablet breaking by patients have
been determined to be imprecise. As the following
discussion demonstrates, for many years experts have called

upon the pharmaceutical industry to improve the quality of
tablet breaking, yet such has not been optimized until the
current invention.
In 1984, Stimpel et al. ("Stimpel"), described the relative
accuracy of breaking of various tablets for treatment of
cardiovascular problems. M. Stimpel et al . , "Breaking
Tablets in Half." The Lancet (1984):1299. Even though
breaking was performed by a sophisticated, dexterous
person, Stimpel found that breaking was not accurate, and
opined that real world use by patients woul-d provide yet
more unsatisfactory results. Stimpel called upon the
pharmaceutical industry to improve the accuracy of
splitting tablets: "Clearly any assumption that halving a
tablet will not lead to inaccurate doses is invalid. This
potential source of inaccuracy could be even more
significant in clinical situations (our study was done
under ideal conditions) and the pharmaceutical industry
should tackle it, either by improving divisibility (as
already has been done for lopressor and logroton) or, even
better, by marketing a wider range of unscored tablets to
provide all the doses that might be indicated clinically."
Despite that finding and statement, and despite the
issuance of various patents relating to optimizing a
scoring pattern and/or tablet shape, Rodenhuis et al . ,
(2004) noted that: "Improving the functioning of score
lines may be a more practical approach than banning this
dosage form" (emphasis added) . N. Rodenhuis et al . , "The
rationale of scored tablets as dosage form." European J. of
Pharmaceutical Sciences 21 (2004):305-308 (hereafter
"Rodenhuis"). Rodenhuis observed that European regulatory
authorities started a policy to discourage scoring of

"tablets in 1998. This policy change, according to
Rodenhuis, likely related to "many recent reports of bad
functioning score lines," that "many scored tablets are
difficult to break," and that "many scored tablets show
unsatisfactory mass uniformity of the subdivided halves."
The authors then go on to describe useful aspects of
scoring tablets. For a comprehensive review article on
this topic, see van Santen, E., Barends, D.M. and Frijlink,
H.W. "Breaking of scored tablets: a review." European J. of
Pharmaceutics and Biopharmaceutics 53 (2002) :139-145 .
Some current studies that demonstrate the severity of the
problem are described below.
Peek et al. , (2002), studied tablet splitting by "elderly
patients" aged 50-79. Peek, B.T., Al-Achi, A., Coombs, S.J.
"Accuracy of Tablet Splitting by Elderly Patients." The
Journal of the American Medical Association 288 No. 4
(2002) : 139-145. Breaking scored tablets with mechanical
tablet splitters without specific instruction led to highly
unsatisfactory separating of the tablets. For example,
warfarin 5 mg was on average split into 1.9 and 3.1 mg
tablets. This potent anticoagulant has such a narrow
therapeutic range that 2, 2.5, and 3 mg tablet doses are
manufactured. Biron et al. , (1999), demonstrated that
warfarin 10 mg also often split to less than 4.25 or
greater than 5.75 mg. Biron, C, Liczner, P., Hansel, S.,
Schved, J.F., "Oral Anticoagulant Drugs: Do Not Cut Tablets
in Quarters." Thromb Haemost 1201 (1999). In addition,
they demonstrated that loss of mass due to crumbling or
chipping of the breaking of the warfarin tablets was
statistically significant. They also demonstrated that
quartering of the tablets was grossly inaccurate.

McDevitt et al., (1998) , found that 25 mg unscored
hydrochlorothiazide (HCTZ) tablets were manually split
badly enough that 12.4% deviated by more than 2 0% from
ideal weight. McDevitt, J.T., Gurst, A.H., Chen, Y.
"Accuracy of Tablet Splitting." Pharmacotherapy 18
No.1(1998):193-197. 77% of the test subjects stated that
they would be willing to pay a premium for individually
produced HCTZ 12.5 mg tablets rather than split unscored 2 5
mg tablets.
Rosenberg et al., (2002), studied pharmacist-dispensed
split tablets. Rosenberg, J.M., Nathan, J.P., Plakogiannis,
F. "Weight Variability of Pharmacist-Dispensed Split
Tablets." Journal of American Pharmaceutical Association 42
No.2 (2002) :200-205. They found that "tablet splitting
resulted in an unacceptably high incidence of weight
variation." They recommended that "standards should be
developed to ensure uniformity of split tablets."
Teng et al. , (2002), using a trained individual in a
laboratory setting to split tablets, concluded that "the
majority of the 11 drug products we tested, when assessed
for their ability to be split into half-tablets of equal
dose, failed a liberally interpreted USP (United States
Pharmacopeia) uniformity test. . . The practice of dividing
tablets to save costs or to improve a dosage regimen .
is not recommended for patients using drugs with more
substantial toxicity and steep dose-response efficacy
curves." Teng, J., Song, C.K., Williams, R.L., Polli, J.E.
"Lack of Medication Dose Uniformity in Commonly Split
Tablets." Journal of American Pharmaceutical Association 42
No. 2 (2002) :195-199.

Rodenhuis reporred that 31% of all tablets in one
Netherlands study were subdivided before being swallowed.
In the U.S., many "managed care" insurance organizations
encourage tablet splitting by patients including of
unscored, irregularly-shaped tablets. Many drug products
in the US are unscored or are provided as capsules despite
being tablettable. The invention herein provides a means
of ameliorating the above problems.
The second problem has, for example, hindered the
acceptability of combination treatments for arterial
hypertension ("hypertension"). If there were no cost
advantage to a patient in taking one dosage form comprising
two drugs (a "combination" dosage form) as opposed to two
dosage forms each comprising one drug, and if the patient
were as willing and able to take two dosage forms as to
take one, there would thus be a disadvantage to a
combination dosage form, due to the inflexibility of
dealing with changing circumstances such as fluctuating
blood pressure or the appearance of side effects to a drug.
This observation, in the U.S., has been propounded many
times over the years, but combination treatments for
hypertension have proven popular for cost and potential
compliance reasons, nonetheless.
In both of the above cases, the present invention provides
a novel and optimal means of ameliorating both of the above
problems.
The prior art as it relates to immediate release
pharmaceutical tablets comprising one drug, or a mixture of
a plurality of drugs within one granulation, appears
straightforward: it has not been taught to place two

substantially identical layers in different places of an
immediate release pharmaceutical tablet with an interposed
different layer, or to utilize a drug in two different
concentrations in the same tablet. The current invention
explains reasons why both of the above may be useful.
The prior art regarding combination drugs teaches
separating them into different layers with an interposed
inactive layer (i.e., one derived from a granulation
lacking drug) only when there is a physical or chemical
incompatibility between them. In that case, the prior art
specifically teaches that said "separating layer" be of as
limited a size as is necessary to separate the incompatible
layers. In contrast, the present invention teaches placing
compatible granulations in different parts of the tablet,
with an interposed preferably inactive layer (preferably of
adequate height to allow it to be broken through); or, in
the case of incompatible substances, requiring that any
separating layer be of a height different than the current
teaching regarding layers comprising incompatible
substances.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
The invention provides an immediate release pharmaceutical
tablet with at least two different vertically disposed
segments, said tablet comprising a drug or drugs, in which:
(a) said tablet includes two or more segments and each
segment either contains the same drug, or two or more
drugs at substantially the same ratio; or else said segment
lacks any pharmacologically effective dose of a drug or
combination of drugs; or (b) said tablet includes a

first segment containing a drug or drugs; a third segment
containing a drug or drugs which are different from the
drug or drugs in said first segment and said first and
third segments are physically and chemically compatible;
and a second segment that is interposed between said first
and third segments and that has an undetectable amount of,
or else a pharmacologically ineffective amount of, any drug
present in said tablet; or (c) said tablet includes a
first segment containing a drug or drugs, a third segment
containing a drug or drugs which are different from the
drug or drugs in said first segment and wherein components
of said first and third segments are physically or
chemically incompatible, and a second segment that is
interposed between said first and said third segment and
that has an undetectable amount of, or a pharmacologically
ineffective amount of, any drug present in said tablet;
said third segment has a height of at least 1.5 mm.
The preferred core tablets of the invention are compressed
tablets having at least two compositionally distinct
segments, with a first segment containing an active drug
and a second segment that:
(a) contains the same drug at a lower concentration than
the concentration of said drug in said first segment,
concentration being dependent on weight/weight ratios of
active drug or drugs to excipients within a segment; or (b)
has no detectable drug or the same drug which is in said
first segment in a pharmacologically ineffective amount,
and said tablet also includes a third segment having the
same drug that is present in said first segment; or
(c) has a combination of said drug that is present in said
first segment with another drug or drugs not present in a

pharmacologically effective quantity or not detectable in
said first segment; or
(d) has no detectable drug or the same drug which is in
said first segment in a pharmacologically ineffective
amount, and said tablet also includes a third segment
having a different drug from the drug that is present in
said first segment wherein the components of said third
segment are compatible with the components of said first
segment; or
(e) has no detectable drug or the same drug which is in
said first segment in a pharmacologically ineffective
amount, and said tablet also includes a third segment
having a different drug from the drug that is present in
said first segment, said second segment having a vertical
height of at least 3mm;
(f) has a different drug than the drug in said first
segment and said tablet also includes a third segment
having the same drug that is present in said first segment.
The invention involves immediate release pharmaceutical
tablets. The terms "active agent," "active drug," "drug,"
"active pharmaceutical ingredient" and "pharmacologically
active agent" may be used interchangeably herein to refer
to a chemical material or compound which, when administered
to an organism (human or animal) induces a pharmacologic
effect, and which includes prescription and non-
prescription pharmaceutical compounds; and such substances
as pharmacologically effective doses of vitamins or co-
factors and the like. Excluded as being drugs herein are
such substances as foodstuffs and vitamins in recommended
daily allowance guantities.

Tablets of the invention belong to the class of immediate
release pharmaceutical tablets formulated with two or more
layers, and are thus non-homogeneous. Tablets of the
invention are adapted to be useful not only as whole
tablets but also to be breakable into subunits known herein
as tablettes, with accurate dosing both as whole tablets
and in tablette form. The invention achieves these ends by
utilizing in most of its preferred embodiments a segment
that is created from a granulation free of active drug (an
"inactive granulation").
It is a primary object of the invention to create immediate
release pharmaceutical tablets adapted to be broken when it
is desired to create a lower dosage (including a dosage of
zero) of a drug or drugs present in the whole tablet, by
allowing breaking through a segment containing no drug, or
else either a minimal concentration of drug or mixture of
drugs (on a w/w basis) or a pharmacologically ineffective
quantity of drug or mixture of drugs, and less preferably
through a segment that contains a more than minimal but
decreased concentration of a drug relative to another
segment in the tablet.
It is a primary object of the invention to apply the
invention both to accurate dosing of- single agent products
and to combination products.
With regard to combination products, relevant introductory
points are: A mixture of drugs within one granulation acts
as a single drug in a granulation from the standpoint of
the separability of one segment from another or from a
portion of another per the invention, in that said two

admixed drugs are inseparable one from another. On the
other hand, the invention is very useful in the case that a
given drug, or mixture of drugs, is present in a
pharmacologically effective quantity in one segment, and a
different drug or different mixture of drugs, are present
in different segments. In a preferred embodiment in which,
for example Drug A is present in a therapeutically
effective quantity in an upper segment, an inner segment
that lacks a pharmacologically effective quantity of any
drug is interposed between two outer (i.e., top and bottom)
segments, and Drug B is present in a therapeutically
effective quantity in a lower segment, then the invention
is most useful in the situation that the height and
especially the "effective height" of said inner segment is
great enough to allow said inner segment to serve as the
breaking region of said tablet substantially without
breaking through either outer segment. The prior art,
however, is such that no minimum height of said inner
segment is necessary for novelty of the invention if, in
said tablet, all ingredients of the upper and lower
segments are physically and chemically compatible with each
other, because in immediate release tablets, no
"separating" layer or segment has been utilized or taught
to be utilized in such a case. In the specialized
situation in which there is an incompatibility between
components of said outer segments, then the prior art is
such that any inner "separating" segment be limited in
height to the minimum needed to eliminate the presence of
any of said incompatibilities, for such reasons as to
minimize the size of the tablet as a whole. In that case,
the invention remains novel in any of its more preferred
forms, in which there is an excess of said inner separating
segment to allow it to be broken.

BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
Fig. 1a is a cross-section of a taller than wide tablet
looking towards the side of the tablet having a score;
Fig. 1b is a cross-section of the tablet of Fig. 1a looking
at the side of the tablet where the score ends;
Figs. 2a-d are views of Fig la and Fig. lb respectively
when the tablets have been broken through the score;
Fig. 3 is a cross-section of a taller than wide tablet
having two segments, one of which is about three-quarters
of the length of the tablet;
Figs. 4a-b are views of Fig. 3 when the tablet has been
broken at the approximate mid-point of the tablet;
Fig. 5 is a cross-section of a taller than wide tablet
having five, segments;
Figs. 6a-b are views of Fig. 5 when the tablet has been
broken through one segment;
Figs. 7a-c are views of Fig. 5 when the tablet has
effectively been broken through two segments in two steps,
first by breaking the tablet and then by breaking the
tablette of Fig. 6b;
Fig. 8 is a cross-section of a tablet having three
segments. Fig. 9 is a perspective view of a scored tablet
according to the invention;
Fig. 10 is a front view of a banded capsule according to
the invention;
Fig. 11 is a front view of a tablet having perforations in
the surface according to the invention; and
Fig. 12 is a front view of a tablet having two printed
dotted on the surface according to the invention.

DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION
Tablets of the invention are preferably produced on a layer
press, such as a tri-layer or five-layer high speed press
manufactured by Korsch AG of Germany.
The tablets are formed from at least two different
granulations; more preferred tablets comprise three
vertically disposed segments.
Of the many tablets than can be produced according to the
invention, some examples are:
A first granulation comprising amlodipine besylate (or,
"amlodipine") enters into a die at a first filling station;
a second granulation comprising inactive excipients enters
on top of said first granulation at a second filling
station; a granulation substantially identical in
composition and quantity (weight) to said first granulation
enters at a third filling station. After final
compression, said tablet is ejected from the die. Each
granulation, upon full entry into the die and thereafter,
forms a layer. Ideally there is minimal, inadvertent
mixing between different granulations in the formation of
layers, but some mixing is to be expected and does not
alter the improvement in the art of creating breakable
tablets from the invention. Different granulations may be
of the same or different colors.
By convention herein, the term "segments" may be used in
place of "layers" in general in discussing the finished
tablets of the invention, for reasons that are explained
below.

A segment represents the entirety of a substantially
homogeneous contiguous part of a tablet. A segment may be
formed from more than one layer, however: If two
substantially identical granulations entered the tablet die
successively, with the second entering directly after and
onto the first, such as at two successive filling stations
during automated high-speed tablet manufacture, then the
two granulations would each form a separate layer after
entering, but when compressed, they would comprise one
segment. A segment therefore is a basic unit of how the
tablets of the invention prove useful. If, however, two
different active drugs, such as different active drugs or
different salts of the same active drug, were compressed
one on top of the other, they would form two segments.
Granulations comprising the same active drug but with
dissimilar excipients would also two segments if one
granulation were compressed onto another.
A segment formed by a plurality of layers that are formed
from substantially identical granulations is called a
compound segment. Compound segments may prove useful in
situations of relatively large quantities of an inactive
granulation, or granulation containing a drug or drugs, so
that two consecutive fills ("feeds") of substantially
identical granulation occur.
Probably the more common situation in tablets of the
invention involves a layer formed from a granulation that
is neither disposed upon nor under (i.e., does not adjoin
and is not contiguous with) a substantially identical
granulation. In this case, a simple segment is formed. In
other words, a non-compound segment is a simple segment.
As used herein, such terms as "horizontal" ("transverse")
and "vertical" when used in relation to a tablet, are based

on the spatial orientation of the tablet as, and after, it
is produced in a die, but before removal or ejection from
the die. Current methods of manufacture produce tablets
with one granulation entering the die on top of another, so
that tablets of the invention produced in such a manner
comprise one or more top (outer) segments, one or more
bottom (outer) segments, and optionally one or more middle
(inner) segments. A segment that is not a top or bottom
(i.e., outer) segment is considered to be an inner segment.
Of course, the lateral parts of an inner segment have an
external surface.
If separate granulations were to be sequentially placed in
a die horizontally (side-to-side) and not vertically as is
currently the practice, then the tablets so produced would
be within the scope of the present invention as the same
product would be produced. When the tablet of Fig. 1, for
example, is laid on a flat table, it will tend to lie
lengthwise at right angles to the manner in which it is
formed in the die, so that if the three segments were all
different colors, then the segments would appear to be
arranged not vertically (one on top of the other) , but
rather horizontally (side-to-side). For consistency of
terminology, such segments nonetheless are considered
herein to be disposed vertically on top of each other.
Tablets of the invention are not formed using a cement,
glue, adhesive, or the like, and are preferably uncoated.
The term "relatively inactive segment" refers to a segment
that either contains an undetectable amount of any drug or
contains a decreased concentration of any
drug or drugs contained in another segment or segments in a
pharmacologically effective quantity. By "decreased
concentration" we mean that the concentration of a drug or
drugs in said relatively inactive segment is no more than
80% that of said drug or drugs in another segment, more

preferably no more than 20% of said other segment's drug or
drugs concentration; most preferably said ratio is no more
than 5%, however. The concentration of a drug or drugs in
a segment means, herein, the ratio, on a weight to weight
basis, of the drug or drugs in said segment to the total
weight of said segment, which includes said drug or drugs
and inactive excipients.
The tablets of the invention are best broken transversely
in order to realize their benefits. They may be broken in
standard ways, according to the invention such as either by
applying force such as a cutting edge directly to the
separation mark desired breaking region, or to other areas
of the tablet, such as the outer segments, to cause the
tablet to break at the desired location.
The drawings depict vertical cross-sectional views of
tablets and tablettes of the invention. Tablets are
depicted as if they were in the die, so that the top of the
tablet as it is oriented on the page corresponds with the
top of the tablet in the die. In other words, the top
segment of the tablet as viewed contains the last
granulation to enter the die. Tablettes are depicted as
they would have been in the die as part of the tablet of
which they were once parts.
Separation marks are intended to guide optional tablet
breaking in the usual manner that is well known with
scores, so that force will be applied to break the tablet
at or about the separation mark in a direction that is
substantially perpendicular to the surface on which it is
desired that breakage of the tablet will be initiated. The
tablet may be broken according to the invention either by
applying force such as a cutting edge directly to the
separation mark, or to other areas of the tablet, such as
the outer segments, to cause the tablet to break at or

about the separation mark and in the direction of the
separation mark.
The separation mark or marks may comprise one or more of
the following:
(a) a score in a side wherein said score is not oriented
vertically ;
(b) indicia on at least side that locates aa desired
breaking region of said tablet;
(c) a band which is located on one segment which is located
on one segment or at an interface of te two segments; or
(d) a core of said tablet in which a first lower and a
second upper segment have the same color and contain either
the same drug in a pharmacologically effective quantity or
both lack a pharmacologically effective quantity of any
drug, and a third inner, interposed segment that has a
different color from said first segment and has either the
same drug as said first segment when said first segment has
a pharmacologically effective quantity of a drug or has no
pharmacologically effective quantity of a drug when said
first segment lacks a pharmacologically effective quantity
of any drug.
"Front views" refer to a cross-sectional view of a tablet
that has a theoretical geometric plane passed through the
tablet relative to a side which is arbitrarily designated
as the front. Figures labeled as "side view", which also
have a corresponding "front view" are taken as a cross-
section through the whole tablet from the right side of a
front view i.e. a side view is a cross-section that is
taken by passing a plane through the vertical axis of the
whole tablet at a 90° angle to the cross-sectional front
view. Each front view represents a schematic cross-section
that passes through the midpoint of the horizontal cross-
section as measured from the front of the tablet to the

back of the tablet or tablette. The front view is also
parallel to the major axis of the tablet (e.g, for a tablet
with a rectangular (but not square) transverse cross-
section, the longer side of the perimeter is parallel with
the plane that depicts the cross-sectional, front view.
That plane is located half-way between the front and back
surfaces of said tablet. The side views of Figs, lb and
2c-d are taken from a vertically-oriented plane that passes
through the midpoint of the longer transverse dimension
(i.e., the width), and thus are located at and
perpendicular to the mid-point of the front view. Drawings
are of tablets that have a rectangular but not square
horizontal cross-section at the vertical mid-point of the
tablet.
Segments containing pharmacologically active amounts of a
drug or drugs are shown crosshatched; pharmacologically
ineffective segments are shown plain (clear, without
crosshatching or stippling). The upper part of each figure
corresponds to the upper part of a tablet, all of which are
depicted as they are situated within a die after final
compression and before ejection from the die. For
consistency, tablettes are depicted in the same orientation
as the tablets from which they are formed, although
tablettes are created after tablet ejection from the die.
Dotted lines in the tablets depicted in the figures may
represent printed marks or other indicia, or scores that
are present on or in the surface of the tablet and, if they
represent a score, said score does not extend deeply enough
into the tablet to appear in the cross-sectional front
view. The transverse dotted lines reflecting scores shown
in the Figures imply no intention to limit the depth of any
scores of the tablets of the invention. Horizontal dotted
lines on the front views that represent the surface scores
are schematic, and do not necessarily represent the full
vertical extent of a score, printed mark, or the like.

Tablettes are depicted with broken surfaces as indicated by
a fine saw-tooth pattern. Such saw-tooth depiction is
schematic and not intended to represent the actual pattern
of breaking of a tablet (or tablette, which often leads to
irregular edges even if said tablet is broken through a
score.
Separation marks in the tablets depicted in the Figures
are depicted as scores that are present on or in the
surface of the tablet and that do not extend deeply enough
into the tablet to appear in the cross-sectional front
views are depicted in the drawings as dotted lines to
reflect the location of said scores on or in the surface of
the tablet (not shown) . It is to be understood that the
depth of a separation mark or other score may be deeper
than one-half the widest cross-section of the tablet in a
particular embodiment, and thus the transverse dotted lines
reflecting scores that are separation marks shown in the
Figures imply no intention to limit the depth of any scores
of the tablets of the invention. Similarly, the tablets
shown that contain scores do not limit the width or extent
of said scores. The horizontal dotted lines on the front
views that represent the surface scores are schematic, and
do not necessarily represent the full vertical extent of
the score. (Perforations or discontinuous scores through
the width or depth of the tablets are not depicted herein,
but remain within the scope of the invention, as are other
marks on or physical changes to the tablet that create a
separation mark.) Any scores or printed indicia that serve
as separation marks are for convenience herein assumed to
be on the front surface of the tablet, which is arbitrarily
chosen from a vertically-oriented surface of the tablets .

The "side view" of a tablet is a cross-sectional view of
the tablet rotated 90 degrees from the front view, and is
shown in Fig. 2c and 2d. No dimension of the separation
marks is limited by their depiction as dotted lines in any
figure. Tablettes are depicted with broken surfaces as
indicated by a fine saw-tooth pattern. Such saw-tooth
depiction is schematic and not intended to represent the
actual pattern of breaking of a tablet or tablette.
Figures la and lb depict a tablet with compositionally
substantially identical upper segment 40 and lower segment
44. Inner segment 42 contains trace amounts of the drug
that is present in a therapeutically effective quantity in
each of segments 40 and 44. Interfaces 46 and 48 represent
regions in which the upper part of segment 42 and the lower
part of segment 42 respectively adjoin upper segment 40 and
lower segment 44. The curved interfaces result from the
profile of the upper tablet punch which is curved. Score
52 is depicted in Fig. lb. Dotted line 50 in Fig. la is a
reflection of score 52 on the surface of the tablet (not
shown) , that does not penetrate half-way through the
shorter transverse axis of the tablet.
Figs. 2a-d depicts tablettes formed from breaking the
tablet of Figs, la and lb through score 52. Inner segment
42 of Fig. la no longer exists as an intact segment. The
upper tablette of Figs. 2a and 2c contains segment 80 that
adjoins an intact upper segment 40 and the lower tablette
contains segment 82 and intact segment 44.
Breaking the tablet of Fig. la and lb through the score
placed in segment 42 is clearly easier than breaking the

tablet through its vertical dimension, which is currently
the practice with scored layered (segmented) tablets. The
fact that no break is made in the parts of the tablet where
the active drug has been place provides for exceptionally
accurate breaking relative to the active drug or drugs
contained in the tablet.
Fig. 3 demonstrates a two-segment tablet, each segment
formed from a granulation containing a pharmacologically
effective amount of medication. Upper (outer) segment 124
is larger than lower (outer) segment 126. Interface 128
indicates a region at which said segments are contiguous.
A printed mark on the outer surface of the tablet (not
shown) indicates a desired breaking point, as indicated by
the location of arrow 130 that reflects the position of
said surface printed mark. The two segments also have
different colors, however, further allowing identification
of which part of the tablet contains which segment.
Figs. 4a and 4b depict the two tablettes formed by breaking
the tablet of Fig. 3. The tablette of Fig. 4a consists of
segment 118, which represents the bulk of segment 124 of
Fig.' 3. The tablette depicted in Fig. 4b contains segment
112 in an intact form and segment 120, which represents a
less than half-portion of segment 126 of Fig. 3. Interface
116 indicates a region at which said segments are
contiguous. The curved face is due to the profile of the
tablet punch.
Fig. 5 illustrates a tablet more elongated than those
previously demonstrated. This tablet is adapted, even more
than the others, for ease of breaking through one segment.

Upper segment 600 is provided with a therapeutic quantity
of a drug; stippled inner segment 604 is provided with a
therapeutic quantity of a different drug; and, lower
segment 608 is provided with a therapeutic quantity of a
drug different from that found in a therapeutic quantity in
segments 600 and 604. Clear (plain) inner segments 602 and
606 contain pharmacologically ineffective amounts of each
of the three drugs found in the tablet. Interfaces 610,
612, 614, and 616 represent the regions at which two
contiguous segments adjoin. The tablet of Fig. 5 is
provided with a different color for each segment. Even
though there is no surface scoring or indicia, the color
scheme is such that a person's attention may be directed to
apply force to break the tablet through segment 602 to
create the tablettes depicted in Figs. 6a and 6b. Fig. 6a
depicts the smaller tablette created by breaking the tablet
of Fig. 5 through segment 602 in a transverse fashion.
Segment 62 0 has been created by said breaking, and segment
602 of Fig. 5 no longer exists as a intact segment. Fig.
6b depicts the larger tablette created by said breaking of
the tablet of Fig. 5. New upper segment 622 has been
created.
Figs. 7a-c depict three tablettes created by the subsequent
breaking of the tablette of Fig. 6b. New segment 630 and
segment 632 have been created and segment 606 no longer
exists as an intact segment.
Fig. 8 is a cross-section of a three segment tablet, having
a top segment 230 having a drug, an inactive middle segment
(no detectable drug or a pharmacologically ineffective
amount of a drug) and a bottom segment which contains the
same drug as the top segment. This tablet is formed with a

tablet punch having a curved profile which forms curved
interfaces 236 and 238 as well as the top of the tablet.
The effective height of the middle segment is H which is
less than the actual height HT of the middle segment due to
the effect of the curved tablet punch. It is desired to
break this type of a tablet only through that part of the
middle segment within the effective height H to avoid
breaking into the drug containing top or bottom segment.
The above-described tablet contains three layers and three
segments may contain amlodipine. It may be broken through
the segment formed from the inactive granulation. Said
breaking, if confined solely to said middle granulation,
will create two tablettes, each containing one
substantially intact segment comprising amlodipine and a
part of the middle segment. The advance on the art of
tablet splitting is that maximal accuracy of dosing present
in each tablette will be achieved, since any weight (or,
mass) difference between the two tablettes will be due to
differences in the quantity of middle segment present, but
said middle segment is expected to have little if any
amlodipine therein. Similarly, any loss of mass due to
chipping or crumbling is expected to occur in the middle
segment.
Fig. 9 is a perspective view of a tablet of the invention
which shows score 701 as a separating mark on a front
surface and top active (drug containing) segment 702;
middle inactive segment (no detectable drug or a
pharmacologically ineffective amount of a drug) and bottom
active segment 706. When the tablet is broken at the score
701, the top segment and the bottom segment will remain
intact.
Fig. 10 is a front view of a tablet of the invention

showing a band 901, such as a gelatin band that is used to
seal hard gelatin capsules, which is applied to suitable
tablets according to the invention to provide a separating
mark. Techniques such as those use to band capsules, as
disclosed in U.S. 4,922,682, which is incorporated by
reference, may be modified to provide a band in making
tablets according to the invention.
Fig. 11 shows a series of perforations 100 that may be made
in the surface of a tablet to form a separation mark
according to the invention. These perforations may be
formed e.g. by mechanical or laser drilling l-2mm holes
that extend into the surface to a depth of l-2mm.
Fig. 12 shows a front view of a tablet according to the
invention that has two printed dotted lines that serve as a
separation mark according to the invention.
Another preferred embodiment of the invention utilizes a
variation on the above, for example:
A first granulation comprising hydrochlorothiazide (HCTZ)
enters the die, followed by an inactive granulation
entering the die twice, followed at the fourth and final
filling station by a granulation comprising bisoprolol (a
beta-blocker) . After final compression, a tablet
consisting of three segments (formed from four layers) has
been created. The layer formed from the first granulation
is the bottom layer, the layers formed from inactive
excipients are the two inner layers and together, after
tablet formation, make up the middle (inner) segment, and
the final granulation comprises the top layer, which after
final compression is denoted the top segment. Thus all
dimensions and directions herein relate to the method of

manufacture of the tablet. This preferably taller than
wider tablet may contain some amount of HCTZ in the middle
and top segments, and may contain some amount of bisoprolol
in the middle and bottom segments.
After breaking the above tablet entirely through the middle
segment, two tablettes are formed. One contains primarily
the full, presumably therapeutically effective quantity of
HCTZ and probably some amount, preferably trace, of
bisoprolol; the other contains primarily the full amount of
bisoprolol and probably some amount, preferably trace, of
HCTZ, plus some quantity of said middle segment. Important
therapeutic benefits in terms of dosage adjustment, side
effect management, and the like are obtained from the above
tablet design and optional ability to substantially
completely create two individual dosage forms form the
combination product.
As Fig.8 demonstrates, cupping or beveling of the upper
punch commonly causes the peripheral parts of any segment
other than the lowest segment, to extend below the level of
the central part of that segment. In order to fully
realize the benefit of a "separating segment" per the
invention, it is optimal that a transverse plane be able to
be placed between the lowest part of a superiorly disposed
segment, and the highest part of an inferiorly disposed
segment, with said plane passing between an interposed,
preferably pharmacologically inactive segment. The
vertical distance between the lowest part of a superiorly
disposed segment and the highest part of an inferiorly
disposed segment is herein denoted the effective height H.
Generally, that measurement will be from the vertical
height from the bottom of the tablet to the plane drawn

horizontally from the periphery of the higher segment, due
to the cupping or beveling of such a segment, and from the
vertical height from the bottom of the tablet to the center
of the lower segment.
The effective height in the case of beveling or cupping of
segments, as easily reflected in the shape of the top of
the tablet, is always less than the height of the
separating or interposed segment through which breaking is
intended to occur. The height of an interposed segment is
the vertical distance from its highest point to the highest
point of the contiguous superiorly disposed segment.
In the case of separating or interposed segments, prior art
limits the height to approximately 1 mm for immediate
release pharmaceutical tablets. The effective height H has
been limited to less than that.
Preferred tablets of the invention often use a height and
an effective height H that are both over 4 mm, and may
exceed 6 mm. Lesser heights and effective heights are
utilized when needed due to size constraints on the tablet.

DESCRIPTION OF MANUFACTURE OF PREFERRED EMBODIMENTS
A tablet is made which has three segments, each with an
active top or upper segment and an active lower or bottom
segment separated by a substantially inactive middle
segment. A Stokes 27-station tri-layer rotary tablet press
is used. All formulations are directly compressible powder
blends. The blending both of the amlodipine formulation and
the benazepril formulation are performed in a Patterson-
Kelly "V" blender. The middle segment consists of 194 mg of
Nu-Tab® and requires no blending. The tablets are
compressed using 0.131 inch by 0.3222 inch oval, concave
tablet punches to a hardness of 35 kiloponds. The bottom
segment is introduced first into the die. The tablet
weight is 310 mg. Tablets so made are 8 mm tall; the
inactive middle segment varies from 5-6 mm in height and a
width of 4mm.
Weights in mg of the granulation comprising each segment
are as follow:


Manufacturing Instructions
1. Weigh each ingredient
2. Screen each ingredient
3. Triturate the color with the major diluent in
geometric proportions using a suitable mixer
4. Add the remaining ingredients, except the lubricant,
to the color mixer from step #3 and mix for desired
time
5. Add the lubricant to the blend from Step #4 and mix
for desired time
6. Add the blend to a suitable press fitted with the
desired tooling and compress into tablets

1. Weigh each ingredient
2. Screen each ingredient
3. Triturate the color with the major diluent in
geometric proportions using a suitable mixer
4. Add the remaining ingredients, except the lubricant,
to the color mixer from step #3 and mix for desired

time
5. Add the lubricant to the blend from Step #4 and mix
for desired time.
6. Add the blend to a suitable press fitted with the
desired tooling and compress into tablets
Tabletting Instructions
1. Place the powder for active layer in hopper #1.
2. Place the powder for placebo layer in hopper #2
3. Place the powder for active layer in hopper #3
4. Compress layer #1 tablets to desired weight (tablets
for layer #1 should form a soft compact)
5. Compress layer #1 & Layer #2 tablets to desired
combined weight of layer #1 and layer #2 weight
(tablets should form a soft compact)
6. Compress the tri-layer tablet to the desired total
tablet weight (layer #1 weight + layer #2 weight +
layer #3 weight) Tablet should be at desired hardness.
A similar tablet of the invention is separately
produced using the same top and bottom segments as the
above, but using the following ingredients instead of Nu-
Tab for the middle segment. The following are blended
using a Patterson-Kelly "V" blender.


2. Screen each ingredient
3. Place all of the ingredients, except the lubricant,
into a suitable mixer and mix for desired time
4. Add the lubricant to the blend from Step #3 and mix
for desired time.
5. Add the blend to a suitable press fitted with the
desired tooling and compress into tablets
The tablets were compressed using oval 0.131 inch by 0.3222
inch, concave tablet punches to a hardness of 35 kilqponds.
The bottom segment was introduced first into the die. The
tablet weight was 280 mg. Tablets with said middle segment
were 6 mm high, and the.inactive middle segment was 3.5-4
mm high.
Tabletting Instructions
1. Place the powder for active layer in hopper #1.
2 . Place the powder for placebo layer in hopper #2
3. Place the powder for active layer in hopper #3
4. Compress layer #1 tablets to desired weight (tablets
for layer #1 should form a soft compact)
5. Compress layer #1 & Layer #2 tablets to desired
combined weight of layer #1 and layer #2 weight
(tablets should form a soft compact)
6. Compress the tri-layer tablet to the desired total
tablet weight (layer #1 weight + layer #2 weight +
layer #3 weight) Tablet should be at desired hardness.
In a similar way, other taller than wider tablets can be
made on a tablet press, such as, the Korsch TRP900 which

can produce taller tablets due to its design for deep
filling cams which allow for deeper fills and greater
distances between the upper and lower compression tools.
To make an oval 0.131 inch by 0.3222 inch, concave tablet
that is 12mm tall on the Korsch TRP900 the formulator
would have to increase the weight of the inactive Nu-Tab®
middle segment to about 323mg. Similarly to have a
finished tablet height of 14mm the tablet would be
formulated with a middle segment weighing about 3 8 8mg. If
the formulator preferred, they could use the second
example for a middle layer, i.e., the dibasic calcium
phosphate (DCP) formulation. In such a case making an
oval 0.131 inch by 0.3222 inch, concave tablet that is
12mm tall on the Korsch TRP900 the formulator would have
to increase the weight of the inactive DCP middle segment
to about 410mg. Similarly to have a finished tablet
height of 14mm the tablet would be formulated with a
middle segment weighing about 4 92mg.
• * *
The invention also includes the method of administering one
or more drugs via the dosage forms such as tablets and
tablettes of the invention to a patient, mammal, or other
animal in need of pharmaceuticals for the prevention or
treatment of an illness, maintenance of good health,
retarding of aging, or other purpose. Included are methods
of treating a patient with only one drug from a combination
product, such as with a novel tablette of the invention,
enabling downward dose adjustment for a variety of reasons;
or, in a similar vein, a patient may be treated with one
whole tablet containing a plurality of active drugs and in
addition receive only one drug from a similar tablet, thus

enabling upward dose adjustment. Combination products that
can benefit from the invention, in which one drug is in an
outer active segment, and a second and different drug is in
the other outer active segment, and a pharmacologically
ineffective inner segment as in embodiments such as was
described above, include those containing the following
pairs of drugs: amlodipine and either benazepril,
chlorthalidone, or atorvastatin; benazepril and
hydrochlorothiazide; olmesartan and hydrochlorothiazide;
and many others, including the majority of the currently-
produced combination products. Also included is the method
of treating a patient with a precise partial dose of
medication from a whole tablet, which may be a half or
quarter of the whole dose, but may usefully be a different
fraction. Warfarin especially may usefully be produced and
dosed according to the invention with separable segments of
the tablet that may but need not be as halves, quarters,
etc. L-thyroxine and digoxin are other examples that could
so benefit, along with warfarin.
The following give possible clinical situations in which
the tablets of the invention could provide important
benefits.
1. A currently marketed product in the United States is
Caduet®, which contains the active ingredients atorvastatin
calcium (atorvastatin) and amlodipine besylate (amlodipine)
which are largely homogeneously interdispersed in an
unscored tablet. The product is indicated to treat both
hyperlipidemia (atorvastatin) and hypertension
(amlodipine). A patient ingesting this tablet daily may
then undergo a blood test and be diagnosed as having liver
dysfunction as manifested by elevation of an enzyme's

concentration in the blood. The physician may then
recommend cessation, possibly temporary, of atorvastatin,
which is stated by the manufacturer to be a possible cause
of liver dysfunction. A patient receiving Caduet, however,
would have to thus also discontinue amlodipine, which is
not in this example desired by the physician. A tablet of
the invention in which atorvastatin and amlodipine were
segregated in different outer active segments, separated by
a middle segment of adequate dimensions, would be a clear
advance over the current Caduet formulation, because such a
tablet would allow a patient to promptly continue ingesting
amlodipine while stopping ingestion of atorvastatin,
without having to go to a pharmacy and fill a new
prescription for a tablet containing only amlodipine as the
active ingredient, while having previously had the
convenience of having both drugs combined in a single
dosage form. The above embodiment of the invention
represents an improvement over the current Caduet dosage
form.
Another clinical situation in which the invention is
superior to Caduet is one in which a patient receiving
amlodipine 5 mg once daily and atorvastatin 20 mg once
daily is advised by a physician to increase the daily
amlodipine dose to 10 mg once daily. A patient in
possession of adequate tablets of the invention, with the
active drugs segregated in a three-segment tablet, would be
able to promptly increase the amlodipine dose by taking a
whole tablet of the invention once daily, plus a tablette
containing 5 mg of amlodipine, produced by breaking a
second whole tablet of the invention.
Another clinical situation in which . the invention is

superior to Caduet involves the case in which a physician
wishes a patient to ingest atorvastatin 20 mg each morning
and amlodipine 2.5 mg twice daily. The invention provides
for amlodipine to be separated from atorvastatin and then
broken precisely in half. The invention thus allows the
patient the advantage of one tablet, whereas to accomplish
this currently in the United States would require one 20 mg
Lipitor® (atorvastatin) tablet and two Norvasc®
(amlodipine) 2.5 mg tablets.
2. The combination of amlodipine besylate and benazepril
hydrochloride (benazepril) is marketed in the United States
under the brand name of Lotrel®. This product is a capsule
that is routinely ingested whole. An embodiment of the
invention provides a whole tablet containing one outer
segment containing amlodipine as the only active drug and
the other outer segment containing benazepril as the only
active drug. If desired, either outer layer may be formed
into more than one segment, as in Fig. la. As in example 1
above regarding Caduet, the middle segment is inactive and
may be broken through to create two tablettes, each
comprising a whole amount of each outer active segment plus
approximately half of the amount of the middle inactive
segment. If a patient were to develop a need for double
the 'dose of one active drug but not the other, the tablet
of the invention could meet that need. Alternatively, if a
patient were to develop a need to ingest only one active
drug, possibly temporarily, due to such conditions as blood
pressure changes or a side effect to one drug but not the
other, the tablet of the invention allows this to be done
without a new dosage form being prescribed.
3. Another use of the invention involves the combination

of amlodipine and chlorthalidone or another diuretic, which
may usefully be combined to treat hypertension. Benefits
of the invention are similar to those described in the
paragraph immediately preceding this paragraph.
4 . Another use of the invention involves the combination
of olmesartan medoxomil (olmesartan, an angiotensin
receptor blocker) and hydrochlorothiazide (HCTZ). This
product is currently marketed in the United States under
the name Benicar/HCT®, with the doses, respectively, of, in
mg: 2 0/12.5, 4 0/12.5, and 4 0/25. A very common starting
dose of a patient will be 20/12.5 once daily. The product
is currently marketed in all strengths as a homogeneous
tablet containing both active drugs. Formulated according
to the current invention, a patient who begins treatment
with the 20/12.5 dose may be increased with the same tablet
to each of the other doses by ingesting one whole 20/12.5
tablet and either a half tablet containing 20 mg of
olmesartan or a half tablet containing 25 mg of HCTZ. This
will provide the physician an opportunity to investigate
the new dose before giving the patient a new prescription.
Other advantages of the invention are similar to those
described above.
5. Another useful combination product that may be
formulated according to the invention involves angiotensin
converting enzyme inhibitors (ACEs) and diuretics such as
HCTZ. Both types of drug not uncommonly have side effects,
so that the invention will be useful to physicians in
dealing with the side effects, as well as with changing
dosing needs to deal with the anti-hypertensive and other
clinical benefits of the drugs.

6. Another product that may benefit from the invention
regarding separating active drugs in separate outer layers
with an inactive middle segment (layer) is a combination
product containing two active drugs, fluoxetine and
olanzapine.
No limitation to the above therapeutic fields or to the
specific examples within their fields is intended for
tablets of the invention, which may be used in any suitable
combination of drugs. No limitation to two-drug
combinations exists, as well. For instance, one outer
active segment of a tablet according to the invention could
contain levodopa and carbidopa, and the other outer active
segment could contain entacapone, a tablet product
containing all three drugs in a homogeneous fashion that is
currantly marketed in the United States as Stalevo®. Also,
a tablet per the invention could involve five layered
segments, with, for example, amlodipine in one outer
segment, an inactive segment adjoining it, a middle segment
containing chlorthalidone or HCTZ, and a second inactive
Segment adjoining both it and the other outer segment that
contains benazepril (see Fig. 8). If both inactive
segments were of adequate dimensions to be conveniently
breakable without damaging any of the three active
segments, thus providing significant clinical advantages
due to the adoption of flexible dosing of the different
active segments.
The following list of possible combinations of a plurality
of drugs is exemplary and not limiting. The combinations
referred to may include two or more members of the classes
listed. Drugs listed below, and herein, may for
convenience exclude mention of any salt of a drug; e.g.,

"atorvastatin" is listed even though its marketed form is
atorvastatin calcium.
Without limitation, useful combinations may include a
plurality of drugs from within the following six drug
classes.
In addition, tablets of the invention may be created
containing only one of a drug from the following list.
With regards to combination use, two methods of use may
apply to the invention. One of these methods is to place
an individual drug in a granulation and a different
individual drug (or combination of drugs) in a different
granulation, potentially with an inactive granulation
interposed between them; another method is to place a
plurality of drugs in one or more segments.
1. Anti-anginal agents, for example:
A. Calcium antagonists (see list below);
B. Beta-blocker (see list below);
C. Organic nitrate preparation (e.g., isosorbide
mononitrate or dinitrate).
2. Anti-anginal agent plus an anti-platelet agent, such
as aspirin, clopidogrel, or ticlopidine.
3. Two hypoglycemic agents (see list below).
4. Potassium chloride and any thiazide-type or loop
diuretic (see lists below).
5. Lipid-lowering agent plus: hypoglycemic agent, anti-
platelet agent, anti-anginal agent, and/or antihypertensive
agent (see lists above and below)
Hypoglycemic agents include: thiazolidinediones:

pioglitazone, rosiglitazone; sulfonylureas: glyburide,
glipizide, glimepiride, chlorpropamide;
Biguanides: metformin;
Meglitinides: nateglinide, repaglinide;
Glucosidase inhibitors: acarbose, miglitol.
6. Antihypertensive agents:
Beta-blockers: acebutolol, atenolol, bisoprolol,
celiprolol, metoprolol, mebivolol, carvedilol (a mixed
alpha-beta blocker), nadolol, oxprenolol, penbutolol,
pindolol, propranolol, timolol, betaxolol, carteolol;
Calcium antagonists (calcium-channel blockers) : nifedipine,
arnlodipine, verapamil, diltiazem, nisoldipine, felodipine,
isradipine, lacidipine, lercanidipine, nicardipine,
manidipine;
Thiazide-type diuretics (with or without potassium-
retaining diuretics such as triamterene, amiloride, or
spironolactone): hydrochlorothiazide, chlorothiazide,
cyclopenthiazide, polythiazide, bendrofluazide,
hydroflumethiazide, chlorthalidone, indapamide,
methylclothiazide, metolazone;
Angiotensin converting enzyme inhibitors: captopril,
enalapril, lisinopril, ramipril, trandolapril, quinapril,
perindopril, moexipril, benazepril, fosinopril;
Angiotensin receptor blockers: losartan, valsartan,
candesartan, telmisartan, eprosartan, irbesartan;
High-ceiling (loop) diuretics (with or without potassium-
retaining diuretics such as triamterene, amiloride, or
spironolactone): furosemide, torsemide, ethacrynic acid,
bumetamide;
Aldosterone antagonist diuretics: spironolactone,
eplerenone,-
Alpha-blockers: doxazosin, terazosin, prazosin, indoramin.

labetolol (a mixed alpha-beta blocker);
Central alpha-agonists: clonidine, methyldopa;
Imidazoline: moxonidine,-
Direct vasodilators: hydralazine, minoxidil;
Adrenergic neuronal blocker: guanethidine.
Lipid-lowering agents include:
Statins: lovastatin, simvastatin, pravastatin,
rosuvastatin, atorvastatin, fluvastatin;
Fibrates: clofibrate, bezafibrate, fenofibrate,
gemfibrozil, ciprofibrate;
Others: ezetimide, niacin, acipimox.
The combinations of drugs disclosed herein are for
illustrative purposes and are not intended to limit the
scope of the invention.
Regarding the important usage of the tablets and tablettes
of the invention, that involving division of a tablet into
tablettes containing similar active segments, most drugs
that may undergo dosage adjustment will be preferred if
they may be divided in an optimally precise manner.
Examples of drugs that will especially benefit from the
advances of the invention in this manner include narrow
therapeutic index drugs such as warfarin, digoxin, L-
thyroxine; vasoactive drugs such as amlodipine;
hypoglycemic agents such 'as rosiglitazone and glipizide;
and anxiolytics drugs such as alprazolam. These are
however but a small fraction of the great mass of drugs
that will benefit from the various embodiments and
procedures of the invention.
There are numerous methods of use of the dosage forms of

the invention, including its tablets and tablettes.
Persons skilled in the medical and pharmaceutical arts will
recognize the many advantages that the various embodiments
of the invention allow over current products. Some
examples of benefits of the inventions involving tablets
containing exactly one similar active segment are described
immediately below.
1. Warfarin is an anticoagulant marketed in the U.S. under
the brand name Coumadin®, which is a scored tablet.
Research has shown that patients do not break warfarin 5 mg
tablets into equal 2.5 mg segments. The invention teaches
different types of tablets that allow warfarin tablets of
any common human dose to be broken into precise halves, and
potentially precise thirds, quarters, etc. . Thus a patient
may utilize warfarin half-tablets produced as per the
invention with similar confidence as in the whole tablet.
Because warfarin doses are frequently broken, many clinical
scenarios exist in which the invention will benefit
patients.
2. Norvasc (amlodipine besylate or amlodipine herein) is
marketed as unscored 2.5, 5, and 10 mg tablets in the U.S.
These tablets are of irregular shape and are difficult to
break. The FDA-approved dosage range is from 2.5 to 10 mg
ingested orally daily. The invention allows improved
functionality of amlodipine. For example, under the
invention, a patient receiving 5 mg daily who a physician
wishes to increase to 7.5 mg daily may simply utilize a
tablet of the invention that comprises two separate 2.5 mg
segments to increase the dose to precisely 7.5 mg, such as
by ingesting one whole 5 mg tablet and one 2.5 mg tablette
created by breaking a 5 mg tablet into two tablettes each

containing 2.5 mg of amlodipine. Convenience and cost
savings are clear. Similarly, a patient receiving a 10 mg
dose of Norvasc who is advised to reduce the dose to 5 mg
daily must currently purchase a new prescription for 5 mg
Norvasc tablets. The invention provides the ability to
provide a 10 mg tablet that may be broken into two
tablettes, each containing precisely 5 mg of amlodipine.
The invention may therefore enable greater flexibility of
treating patients, and provide cost savings as well. A
further benefit of the invention is that various
embodiments allow fully accurate separation of a tablet
into a tablette comprising one-fourth of the dose of the
active ingredient as is found in the whole tablet. This
may for example be done for amlodipine by providing four
active segments all containing 2.5 mg of amlodipine and all
contiguous with the same side of an inactive outer segment
(see embodiment #1; and see Fig. 6a modified to have four
and not two active segments) . Thus, a 10 mg amlodipine
tablet of the invention may be utilized to provide a 7.5 mg
dose; or, it may be utilized to provide four 2.5 mg doses.
A further benefit of the invention may relate. to pediatric
or geriatric doses, which may not be produced in
appropriate dose strengths. In the case of amlodipine, a
1.25 mg daily dose may be useful in either small children
with hypertension, or in frail elderly patients with angina
or hypertension, who may have hepatic dysfunction. Even
though the United States Food and Drug Administration (FDA)
has not approved a 1.25 mg dose, precise divisibility of
the approved 2.5 mg dose would allow a 1.25 mg daily dose.
In addition, precise divisibility of the approved 2.5 mg
dose will allow accurate dosing of 3.75 mg daily.

Another use of the invention is to for the first time
enable a method of cost savings to insurers and patients.
The invention allows this because many drugs, such as
Norvasc and Coumadin, have pricing that differs little (if
at all) between different doses. Because tablet splitting
is imprecise for most scored tablets, the practice of
mandatory splitting has been met with disapproval by most
physician and pharmacist organizations. The invention
enables tablet splitting due to provide accurate dosing
when a tablet (or some tablettes, as in Fig. lb) of the
invention are broken as described herein. Substantial
benefits are foreseen from this innovation. In addition,
the ability to separate one active drug from another in a
combination product has cost saving advantages, as well.
It is recognized that related inventions may be within the
spirit of the disclosures herein. Also no omission in the
current application is intended to limit the inventors to
the current claims or disclosures. While certain preferred
and alternative embodiments of the invention have been set
forth for purposes of disclosing the invention,
modifications to the disclosed embodiments may occur to
those who are skilled in the art.

WE CLAIM:
1. An immediate release pharmaceutical tablet with at least two
segments, said tablet containing a drug or drugs, in which:

a) said tablet includes:
(i) a first segment containing a drug or drugs;
(ii) a third segment containing a drug (or plurality of drugs) which is (are)
different from the drug (or drugs) in said first segment, and
(iii) a second segment that is interposed between said first and third
segments and that has an undetectable amount of, or else a
pharmacologically ineffective amount of, any drug present in said tablet;
(iv) physical and chemical compatibility between said first and third
segment; or,
(b) said tablet includes:
(i) a first segment containing a drug (or two or more drugs);
(ii) a third segment containing a drugs (or drugs) which are different from
the drug or drugs in said first segment;
(iii) a second segment that is interposed between said first and said third
segment and that has an undetectable amount of, or a pharmacologically
ineffective amount of, any drug present in said tablet; and,
(iv) said third segment has either or both of the following: a height of at
least 2.5 mm or an effective height of at least 1.5 mm.

2. An immediate release pharmaceutical tablet as claimed in claim 1
comprising at least two compositionally distinct segments, with a
first segment containing a drug in a pharmacologically effective
amount and a second segment that:
(a) contains the same drug at a lower concentration than the
concentration of said drug in said first segment; or
(b) has no detectable drug or the same drug which is in said first
segment in a pharmacologically ineffective amount and also includes
a third segment having the same drug that is present in said first
segment; or
(c) contains the drug in said first segment and also contains another
drug or drugs not present in said first segment; or,
(d) either has no detectable drug, or lacks any drug or drugs in a
pharmacologically effective amount, wherein said tablet also
comprises a third segment containing a pharmacologically effective
quantity of a different drug from the drug that is present in said first
segment and wherein said first and third segments are physically
and chemically compatible;
or,
(e) either contains no detectable drug or else contains in a
pharmacologically ineffective amount the same drug which is in said

first segment; and also includes a third segment having a
pharmacologically effective dose of a different drug or drugs from
said drug (or drugs) that is (are) present in said first segment, said
second segment having one or both of the following: a height of at
least 2.5 mm or an effective height of 1.5 mm.
(f) has a pharmacologically effective quantity of a different drug (or
drugs) than said drug (or drugs) in said first segment, in which said
tablet also includes a third vertically disposed segment having the
same drug that is present in said first segment.
3. An immediate release pharmaceutical tablet as claimed in claim 2
wherein the second segment has the same drug at a lower concentration
than the concentration of said drug in said first segment.
4. An immediate release pharmaceutical tablet as claimed in claim 3
wherein said second segment has a height greater than the combined
height of said first segment and said third segment.
5. An immediate release pharmaceutical tablet as claimed in claim 3
where a score, perforations, printed marks, or gelatin or a combination of

thereof, are placed on or within said second segment and are
predominantly horizontally oriented to guide tablet breaking through
said second segment substantially without breaking through said first
segment or said third segment.
6. An immediate release pharmaceutical tablet as claimed in claim 2
wherein the second segment contains a combination of the drug in said
first segment with another drug or drugs not present in said first
segment.
7. An immediate release pharmaceutical tablet as claimed in claim 2
wherein the second segment contains no detectable drug or the same
drug which is in said first segment in a pharmacologically ineffective
amount, and wherein said tablet has a third segment having the same
drug that is present in said first segment.
8. A immediate release pharmaceutical tablet as claimed in claim 7
wherein the concentration of the drug in said first and third segments is
substantially the same.

9. An immediate release pharmaceutical tablet as claimed in claim 8 in
which the quantity of drug in said first and third segments is
substantially the same.
10. An immediate release pharmaceutical tablet as claimed in claim 8
wherein said first and second segments come together at an interface
which is provided with a separation mark.
11. An immediate release pharmaceutical tablet as claimed in claim 2
having in said second segment no detectable drug or the same drug
which is in said first segment in a pharmacologically ineffective amount,
said tablet also containing a third segment having a different drug from
the drug that is present in said first segment, said third segment being
physically and chemically compatible with said first segment.
12. An immediate release pharmaceutical tablet as claimed in claim 3
that contains a separation mark selected from the group consisting of a
score, indicia, printed indicia, a perforation or a band in a second
segment or at an interface between segments.

13. An immediate release pharmaceutical tablet as claimed in claim 2
wherein said second segment has a different drug than the drug in said
first segment and also includes a third segment having the same drug
that is present in said first segment.
14. An immediate release pharmaceutical tablet as claimed in claim 13
wherein said second segment has a substantially horizontal separation
mark placed on said second segment, along a side of said tablet parallel
to the vertical axis of said tablet, said vertical axis being the same as the
vertical axis of the tablet die in which the tablet is made.
15. An immediate release pharmaceutical tablet as claimed in claim 7
that is derived from three vertically disposed granulations that form three
vertically disposed segments, a first segment at the top, a second
segment in the middle and a third segment at the bottom and having a
substantially horizontal separation mark placed substantially
horizontally on or within said second segment.
16. An immediate release pharmaceutical tablet as claimed in claim 7 in
which said first segment and said third segment are substantially
compositionally identical.

17. An immediate release pharmaceutical tablet as claimed in claim 7 in
which said first segment and said third segment contain substantially
identical quantities of the same drug or drugs, where the amount or ratio
of said drug or drugs is the same in both segments.
18. An immediate release pharmaceutical tablet as claimed in claim 7 in
which said second segment is of a color which permits visual
identification of said second segment apart from said first segment.
19. An immediate release pharmaceutical tablet as claimed in claim 7 in
which said second segment contains a separation mark.
20. An immediate release pharmaceutical tablet as claimed in claim 19 in
which said second segment contains indicia.
21. An immediate release pharmaceutical tablet as claimed in claim 20 in
which said second segment contains printed indicia.
22. An immediate release pharmaceutical tablet as claimed in any one of
claims 19, 20 or 21 in which breaking said tablet, when guided by color,
scoring, or printed indicia yields a tablette having a predetermined
quantity of drug.

23. An immediate release pharmaceutical tablet as claimed in claim 7 in
which the first segment and third segment consist essentially of the same
drug.
24. An immediate release pharmaceutical tablet as claimed in claim 11 is
provided with a separation mark.
25. An immediate release pharmaceutical tablet as claimed in claims 7 or
11 wherein the second segment has a color which permits visual
identification of said second segment apart from said first segment and
said third segment.
26. An immediate release pharmaceutical tablet as claimed in claims 7 or
11 in which the second segment corresponds to a segment located in the
middle of the tablet.

27. An immediate release pharmaceutical tablet in which the tablet is
produced sequentially from a first granulation, a second granulation that
contains no detectable drug or a pharmacologically inactive amount of a
drug and a third active granulation that is provided with a different
active drug or drugs than said first granulation, wherein:

(a) all granulations in the tablet are physically and chemically
compatible; and/or
(b) the segment derived from the second granulation has an effective
height of greater than 4mm.
28. An immediate release pharmaceutical tablet as claimed in claim 27 in
which said segment derived from the second granulation has an effective
height of from 3-4 mm.
29. An immediate release pharmaceutical tablet as claimed in claim 27 in
which said segment derived from the second granulation has an effective
height of from 1.5-3 mm.
30. An immediate release pharmaceutical tablet as claimed in claim 27 in
which the tablet consists of three segments.
31. An immediate release pharmaceutical tablet as claimed in claim 27 in
which said second granulation has an amount of drug or drugs which is
pharmacologically inactive.

32. An immediate release pharmaceutical tablet as claimed in claim 27 in
which other granulations having no detectable active drug or a
pharmacologically inactive amount of an active drug are interposed
between said first and third granulations.
33. An immediate release pharmaceutical tablet as claimed in claim 27 in
which said first, second and third granulations have colors which allow
for the identification of each tablet segment.
34. An immediate release pharmaceutical tablet as claimed in claim 27 in
which a segment formed from said second granulation is provided with a
separation mark that without limitation may be a substantially
horizontally oriented score, indicia, or perforations.
35. An immediate release pharmaceutical tablet as claimed in claim 34 in
which a segment formed from said second granulation is provided with a
score.

36. An immediate release pharmaceutical tablet as claimed in claim 34 in
which said segment formed from said second granulation is provided
with indicia.

38. An immediate release pharmaceutical tablet as claimed in claim 34 in
which breaking through said segment formed from said second
granulation provides accurate separation of said first segment from said
third segment .
39. An immediate release pharmaceutical tablet as claimed in claim 1
wherein said core tablet forms a tablet structure selected from the group
consisting of A-I-B-I-A, A-I-B-I-B, A-I-B-I-C, or A-B-I-C wherein A, B, C
and I represent mutually different segments that are vertically disposed
upon each other and wherein A, B and C contain an active drug or drugs
and I is a segment without a pharmacologically effective quantity of any
drug.

40. An immediate release pharmaceutical tablet as claimed in claim 39 in
which each of segments A, B, C and/or I have either a color or indicia
which identifies each of segments A, B, I, and C as being different
segments.
41. A method of breaking an immediate release pharmaceutical tablet as
claimed in claims 12, 13 or 19 which comprises breaking said tablet at
said separation mark.

42. A pharmaceutical tablet as claimed in claim 1 in which said drug or
drugs is or are pharmacologically effective in the treatment of
cardiovascular conditions, psychiatric conditions, diabetes, thyroid
disorders, pain or thrombotic disorders.


An immediate release drug containing pharmaceutical tablet adapted for accurate breaking which has two or more
segments with at least one segment containing a drug.

Documents:

03325-kolnp-2006 abstract.pdf

03325-kolnp-2006 claims.pdf

03325-kolnp-2006 correspondence others.pdf

03325-kolnp-2006 description(complete).pdf

03325-kolnp-2006 drawings.pdf

03325-kolnp-2006 form-1.pdf

03325-kolnp-2006 form-2.pdf

03325-kolnp-2006 form-3.pdf

03325-kolnp-2006 form-5.pdf

03325-kolnp-2006 international publication.pdf

03325-kolnp-2006 international search authority report.pdf

03325-kolnp-2006-correspondence others-1.1.pdf

03325-kolnp-2006-pct others.pdf

3325-KOLNP-2006-ASSIGNMENT.pdf

3325-KOLNP-2006-ASSIGNMENT1.1.pdf

3325-KOLNP-2006-CLAIMS.pdf

3325-KOLNP-2006-CORRESPONDENCE 1.1.pdf

3325-KOLNP-2006-CORRESPONDENCE 1.2.pdf

3325-KOLNP-2006-CORRESPONDENCE 1.3.pdf

3325-KOLNP-2006-CORRESPONDENCE.pdf

3325-KOLNP-2006-DESCRIPTION (COMPLETE) 1.1.pdf

3325-KOLNP-2006-DRAWINGS 1.1.pdf

3325-KOLNP-2006-EXAMINATION REPORT REPLY RECIEVED.pdf

3325-KOLNP-2006-EXAMINATION REPORT.pdf

3325-KOLNP-2006-FORM 1.pdf

3325-kolnp-2006-form 18.pdf

3325-KOLNP-2006-FORM 2 1.1.pdf

3325-KOLNP-2006-FORM 2-1.2.pdf

3325-KOLNP-2006-FORM 26.pdf

3325-KOLNP-2006-FORM 3 1.1.pdf

3325-KOLNP-2006-FORM 3-1.2.pdf

3325-KOLNP-2006-FORM 3.pdf

3325-KOLNP-2006-FORM 5-1.1.pdf

3325-KOLNP-2006-FORM 5.pdf

3325-KOLNP-2006-FORM 6.pdf

3325-KOLNP-2006-GRANTED-ABSTRACT.pdf

3325-KOLNP-2006-GRANTED-CLAIMS.pdf

3325-KOLNP-2006-GRANTED-DESCRIPTION (COMPLETE).pdf

3325-KOLNP-2006-GRANTED-DRAWINGS.pdf

3325-KOLNP-2006-GRANTED-FORM 1.pdf

3325-KOLNP-2006-GRANTED-FORM 2.pdf

3325-KOLNP-2006-GRANTED-SPECIFICATION.pdf

3325-KOLNP-2006-MISCLLENIOUS.pdf

3325-KOLNP-2006-OTHERS.pdf

3325-KOLNP-2006-PA.pdf

3325-KOLNP-2006-PETITION UNDER RULE 137-1.1.pdf

3325-KOLNP-2006-PETITION UNDER RULE 137-1.2.pdf

3325-KOLNP-2006-PETITION UNDER SECTION 8(1) READ WITH RULE 12.pdf

3325-KOLNP-2006-REPLY TO EXAMINATION REPORT.pdf


Patent Number 252091
Indian Patent Application Number 3325/KOLNP/2006
PG Journal Number 17/2012
Publication Date 27-Apr-2012
Grant Date 25-Apr-2012
Date of Filing 13-Nov-2006
Name of Patentee ACCU-BREAK TECHNOLOGIES INC.
Applicant Address 1000 SOUTH PINE ISLAND RD., SUITE 430, PLANTATION FLORIDA 33324
Inventors:
# Inventor's Name Inventor's Address
1 SOLOMON, LAWRENCE 7810 ALTON VILL CT., TORONTO,ONTARIO M5R 3B7, BOCA RATON, FL 33433
2 KAPLAN, ALLAN, S. 7011 MALLORCA CRESENT, BOCA RATON, FL 33433
PCT International Classification Number A61K 9/20
PCT International Application Number PCT/US2005/018639
PCT International Filing date 2005-05-23
PCT Conventions:
# PCT Application Number Date of Convention Priority Country
1 60/573,134 2004-05-21 U.S.A.
2 60/573,042 2004-05-21 U.S.A.