I know that thalidomide naturally undergoes in vivo racemization and acid hydrolysis, which is the reason why it is teratogenic. As far as I know, apremilast is one analog of thalidomide that doesn't undergo racemization due to its lacking of an acidic chiral proton. However, it does undergo hydrolysis, which could still lead to a teratogenic product. I guess my main question is what structural features lead to the hydrolysis of thalidomide/its analogs, and is there an analog that doesn't undergo either racemization or hydrolysis?