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1.
Spectrochim Acta A Mol Biomol Spectrosc ; 264: 120255, 2022 Jan 05.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34464919

ABSTRACT

For the estimation of some co-administered antimicrobials, two highly accurate and precise spectrofluorimetric methods were developed. Fluconazole (FLZ) is co-administered with either ciprofloxacin (CPR) or ofloxacin (OFX) for the treatment of certain microbial infections. On the other hand, another antimicrobial drug, vancomycin (VNC) is co-administered with ciprofloxacin (CPR) for peritonitis treatment. In method I, conventional spectrofluorimetry has been introduced for the concurrent quantitative estimation of FLZ in presence of OFX or CPR. While in method II, a first derivative synchronous spectrofluorimetric technique was adapted for quantitation of VNC and CPR co-administered combination. Both of them were utilized for estimation of the considered drugs in raw materials, laboratory prepared mixtures, dosage forms, and biological fluids. Method I was relied on simultaneous measuring of the native fluorescence of FLZ and OFX or CPR without any overlapping between the emission spectra of each binary mixture (FLZ / OFX) and (FLZ / CPR). Fluorescence intensities were measured at 283.0, 483.0 and 436.0 nm after excitation at 262.0, 292.0 and 275.0 nm for FLZ, OFX and CPR, respectively. Method II was utilized the synchronous fluorescence intensity of VNC and CPR in methanol at Δλ = 40 nm. The first derivative synchronous spectra were calibrated at 297.0 nm for VNC and at 379.5 nm for CPR. Different variables influencing conventional and synchronous fluorescence intensities of the four antimicrobials under investigation were precisely optimized. Both methods were successfully investigated for the determination of the studied drugs in plasma. The linear data analysis for the calibration curves reveals a good relationship in the ranges of 1.0-10.0, 0.25-2.5 and 0.06-0.6 µg/mL for FLZ, OFX and CPR for method I with limits of detection 0.144, 0.038 and 0.007 µg/mL and limits of quantitation of 0.437, 0.114 and 0.021 µg/mL for FLZ, OFX and CPR, respectively. Linearity range for method II was 0.5 -10.0 µg/mL for VNC and CPR with detection limits of 0.127 and 0.110 µg/mL and quantitation limits of 0.380 and 0.334 µg/mL for VNC and CPR, respectively. International Council on Harmonization ICH Q2 (R1) Guidelines were followed in the developed methods validation. The achieved outcomes were statistically compared with those found by the reported ones, and no significant difference was observed.


Subject(s)
Anti-Infective Agents , Pharmaceutical Preparations , Calibration , Ciprofloxacin , Spectrometry, Fluorescence
2.
Spectrochim Acta A Mol Biomol Spectrosc ; 253: 119570, 2021 May 15.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33621934

ABSTRACT

Four simple, rapid, accurate and precise spectrophotometric methods were established and validated in accordance with ICH Q2 (R1) guidelines for the simultaneous determination of Vancomycin (VNC) and Ciprofloxacin (CPR) in their raw materials, laboratory prepared mixtures and pharmaceutics. Method A depends on using first derivative spectrophotometry (D1) where VNC and CPR were resolved at 243.6 and 262.0 nm, respectively. Concerning method B, it is based on utilizing first derivative of ratio spectra (DD1) where determination was performed at the peak maxima at 244.0 nm and 258.0 nm for VNC and CPR, respectively. Two chemometric models were applied for the quantitative analysis of both drugs in their laboratory prepared mixtures, namely, partial least squares (PLS) (method C) and artificial neural network (ANN) (method D). For univariate methods linearity range for both drugs was in the range of 3-30 and 1-10 µg/mL for VNC and CPR, respectively. Multivariate calibration methods using five level, two factor calibration model for the development of 25 mixtures were also applied for the simultaneous estimation of the two drugs in their laboratory prepared mixture using spectral region from 200.0 to 300.0 nm using interval 1 nm. The suggested methods have been successfully extended to the assay of the two studied drugs in laboratory-prepared mixtures and pharmaceuticals with excellent recovery. First derivative spectrophotometry (D1) was also applied for the assay of both analytes in spiked human plasma with good recovery. No interaction with common pharmaceutical additives has been observed which indicate the selectivity of the method. The results obtained were favourably compared with those obtained applying the reported methods. The methods are validated in compliance with the ICH Q2 (R1) guidelines and the measured accuracy and precision are assessed to be within the accepted limits.


Subject(s)
Ciprofloxacin , Vancomycin , Calibration , Humans , Laboratories , Least-Squares Analysis , Reproducibility of Results , Spectrophotometry
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