A diluent in medication is one or more inert/inactive ingredients that are added to the API(s) of a drug formulation. Diluents are a subclassification of broader category of excipients. Excipients include all inactive/inert substances added to active pharmaceutical ingredients (APIs) that result in a finished drug formulation.
Diluents (also know as fillers) can be solid, liquid, or specialty forms. In addition to diluents, binders, lubricants, coatings, colorants, emulsifiers and solvents are excipient subcategories. In addition to classification by type of excipient, each subcategory can be categorized by whether they are natural, synthetic or both, and by how they are administered, oral, parenteral or topical.
From an industry perspective, the overall pharmaceutical excipients category holds an estimated 2025 value of 9.6 billion USD Diluents represent the largest share of the category at an estimated 41.2% of market share, at more than 4 billion USD in value. Projected category annual growth rate (CAGR) is forecast at 5.75% through 2034.
Knowing more about the functions and properties of diluents is valuable for everyone involved in new drug discovery, development and optimization.
Diluents enable tablets and capsules, suspensions and syrups to be consistently manufactured to meet volume, size, shape, weight, and patient-centered specifications. Diluents can perform a variety of purposes in the development of drug formulations. This may call for a combination of diluents with a formula, or in some instances, a single diluent is capable of meeting multiple goals.
Without diluents, many APIs could not be delivered to human patients. There would be no framework or mechanism to ensure drug stability, dosage accuracy, consistency, usability and delivery into the human body, whether oral or parenterally delivered.
Of the three categories solid, liquid, specialty/gas, solid diluents are the most widely used. Their prevalence is due to the sheer scale of orally administrated tablets and capsules marketed, and their versatility.
Liquid diluents are required in the manufacture of both oral and parenterally administered medicines. Liquid diluents can act as fillers in oral suspensions or syrups for oral dosing, but like solid diluents, they can often multitask when required. Parenteral liquid diluents act as reconstituting agents for intravenous infusion or injection.
Specialty diluents are those less frequently used. Specialty diluents are seen primarily in biological and immuno-targeted drugs. Specialty diluents are expected to grow exponentially, due to the new challenges in developing diluents suited to emerging immunotherapies, peptides and biologics. The molecular and living nature of biotech formulations require unique diluents that can ensure uniform dosing, purity and stability without interfering with the biologic active substance or therapeutic peptide/protein.
|
Diluent |
Type |
Key Properties |
Typical Uses |
Considerations |
|
Lactose |
Organic |
Excellent compressibility, good dissolution, cost-effective |
Tablets, capsules |
Lactose sensitivity in high-dose or long-term use |
|
Microcrystalline Cellulose (MCC) |
Organic |
Superb flowability, high binding, ideal for direct compression |
Tablets |
Compatible with many APIs |
|
Starches (e.g, Starch 1500) |
Organic |
Cost-effective, biodegradable, versatile |
Tablets, capsules |
Requires controlled humidity (30–50% RH) |
|
Mannitol |
Organic |
Chemically stable, good taste, suited for chewable and ODT formulations |
Chewable tablets, orally disintegrating tablets |
Higher cost, poor flowability |
|
Dibasic Calcium Phosphate (DCP) |
Inorganic |
Chemically inert, moisture-stable, good for direct compression |
Moisture-sensitive solid dose drugs |
Can affect formula pH |
|
Calcium Carbonate |
Inorganic |
Economical, eco-friendly, improves flow and dissolvability |
Tablets, capsules |
Generally safe and widely accepted |
Solid diluents, whether organic or inorganic, can act solely as a filler if needed, or as a multi-function additive. Active ingredients (APIs) often represent the smallest physical part of the whole tablet or capsule/powder that must deliver a consistent dose. Solid diluents are available as organic and inorganic ingredients, with organic solid diluents comprising much of the market. Selecting the optimal diluent for a solid form oral medicine calls for compatibility testing with the API of potentially suited diluents. Diluent factors that could impact patient sensitivities, such as allergen risks, high dosages or long-term are addressed through compatibility studies. Failure to address potential risks could cause consumer or clinician reluctance to use the medicine.
Flowability to manage diversity in particle size and density
Compressibility for hardness, disintegration, drug release
Stability during storage and shelf life
Patient experience (taste, appearance, mouthfeel)
These are just some of the solid diluents used globally in tablets and capsules (or powdered formulas).
Liquid diluents are not used to increase the volume of a liquid medicine. Instead, liquid diluents are a means of transferring APIs into the body via injection, intravenously or other parenteral administration. Since the liquid diluent is the immediate medium that encounters blood (or tissue in an intramuscular injection), the solubility of the API, its chemical stability and compatibility are among multiple critical factors to be tested for safe and effective injectables.
Diluents could be called “quiet guardians” of APIs and therapeutic efficacy for formulations of all kinds. An area to watch for change is how diluents are used in the biologics and immunotherapies sector. Researchers are beginning to ask questions about longstanding tenets about “inactive” ingredients—diluents, whether organic or inorganic—can be used in the same ways they’ve been used in oral and parenteral medicines.
Studies such as this, evaluate new data about how excipients and diluents work in the body as part of a living formulations. The term “inactive” is predicted to be nuanced, with some diluents and excipients preliminarily showing that they may “directly modulate physiologically relevant targets.” Deeper knowledge through a systematic approach to research will pave the way for state-of-the-art data to confirm or redirect the safe administration, potency and contraindications of living formulations.
While “excipients” covers many substances and functions in the formulation of new drugs of all types, each is most known for a certain role, even if it possesses multiple capabilities. Diluents, like all excipients, are inactive substances that are added to drug formulations for a specific purpose or as a vehicle to deliver an active pharmaceutical ingredient (API). Diluents differ from other excipients in their uniquely suited function as filler and bulk-increasing agents. No APIs could be presented to human medicine without excipients of all kinds to enable consistent, safe, effective medicines to reach the field of human health.
Diluents are critical inactive ingredients within the excipients market that are available as solid, liquid and specialty forms for many functions. Their foundational purpose is to increase the volume of a formula to optimize the delivery and consistency of the API. The characteristics of solid and liquid diluents are diverse. There are many well-established and effective options that are proven, safe and economical to perfect formulas for modern drugs.
The market for diluents is projected for continued growth of 5.75% through 2034.The growing biologic drug market is expected to drive new diluent discovery opportunities to meet the unique challenges of biologics and targeted immunotherapies.
Relying on established and trusted diluents allows your team to proceed with confidence toward a successful launch and positive response in the field. With many emerging advancements and ongoing innovation, keeping an eye on what is happening in diluent development as a key player in pharmaceutical products can open new doors and help you keep pace with market and regulatory change.