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1.
J AOAC Int ; 101(3): 723-731, 2018 May 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28886756

ABSTRACT

Although the ultimate goal of administering active pharmaceutical ingredients (APIs) is to save countless lives, the presence of impurities and/or degradation products in APIs or formulations may cause harmful physiological effects. Today, impurity profiling (i.e., the identity as well as the quantity of impurity in a pharmaceutical) is receiving critical attention from regulatory authorities. Despite the predominant use of spectroscopic and chromatographic methods over electrochemical methods for impurity profiling of APIs, this work investigates the opportunities offered by electroanalytical methods, particularly, ion-selective electrodes (ISEs), for profiling degradation-related impurities (DRIs) compared with conventional spectroscopic and chromatographic methods. For a meaningful comparison, diatrizoate sodium (DTA) was chosen as the anionic X-ray contrast agent based on its susceptibility to deacetylation into its cytotoxic and mutagenic degradation product, 3,5-diamino-2,4,6 triiodobenzoic acid (DTB). This cationic diamino compound can be also detected as an impurity in the final product because it is used as a synthetic precursor for the synthesis of DTA. In this study, four novel sensitive and selective sensors for the determination of both DTA and its cytotoxic degradation products are presented. Sensors I and II were developed for the determination of the anionic drug, DTA, and sensors III and IV were developed for the determination of the cationic cytotoxic impurity. The use of these novel sensors not only provides a stability-indicating method for the selective determination of DTA in the presence of its degradation product, but also permits DRI profiling. Moreover, a great advantage of these proposed ISE systems is their higher sensitivity for the quantification of DTB relative to other spectroscopic and chromatographic methods, so it can measure trace amounts of DTB impurities in DTA bulk powder and pharmaceutical formulation without a need for preliminary separation.


Subject(s)
Diatrizoate/analogs & derivatives , Diatrizoate/analysis , Drug Contamination , Electrochemical Techniques/methods , Ion-Selective Electrodes , Chromatography, High Pressure Liquid , Contrast Media/analysis , Electrochemical Techniques/instrumentation , Hydrogen-Ion Concentration , Limit of Detection , Mutagens/analysis , Spectrophotometry, Ultraviolet
2.
J Pharm Biomed Anal ; 146: 179-187, 2017 Nov 30.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28881315

ABSTRACT

Acquisition of the dissolution profiles of more than single active ingredient in a multi-analyte pharmaceutical formulation is a mandatory manufacturing practice that is dominated by utilization of the off-line separation-based chromatographic methods. This contribution adopts a new "Double-Track" approach with the ultimate goal of advancing the in-line potentiometric sensors to their most effective applicability for simultaneous acquisition of the dissolution profiles of two active ingredients in a binary pharmaceutical formulation. The unique abilities of these sensors for real-time measurements is the key driver for adoption of "green analytical chemistry" (GAC) principles aiming to expand the application of eco-friendly analytical methods With the aim of performing a side-by-side comparison, this work investigates the degree of adherence of ISEs to the 12 principles of GAC in multicomponent dissolution profiling with respect to the HPLC. For the proof of concept, a binary mixture of naproxen sodium (NAPR) and diphenhydramine hydrochloride (DIPH) marketed as Aleve pm® tablets was selected as a model for which dissolution profiles were attained by two techniques. The first "Double-Track" in-line strategy depends on dipping two highly integrated membrane sensors for continuous monitoring of the dissolution of each active pharmaceutical ingredient (API) by tracing the e.m.f change over the time scale. For the determination of NAPR, sensor I was developed using tridodecyl methyl ammonium chloride as an anion exchanger, while sensor II was developed for the determination of DIPH using potassium tetrakis (4-chlorophenyl) borate as a cation exchanger. The second off-line strategy utilizes a separation-based HPLC method via off-line tracking the increase of peak area by UV detection at 220nm over time using a mobile phase of acetonitrile: water (90:10) pH 3. The advantages of the newly introduced "Double-Track" approach regarding GAC principles are highlighted, and the merits of these benign real-time analyzers (ISEs) that can deliver equivalent analytical results as HPLC while significantly reducing solvent consumption/waste generation are described.


Subject(s)
Diphenhydramine/chemistry , Naproxen/chemistry , Chemistry, Pharmaceutical/methods , Chromatography, High Pressure Liquid/methods , Solubility , Spectrophotometry, Ultraviolet/methods , Tablets/chemistry
3.
Biomed Chromatogr ; 31(2)2017 Feb.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27460216

ABSTRACT

The X-ray diagnostic agent sodium diatrizoate (DTA) was studied for chemical degradation. The 3,5-diamino derivative was found to be the alkaline and acidic degradation product. The 3,5-diamino degradate is also the synthetic precursor of DTA and it is proved to have cytotoxic and mutagenic effects. A sensitive, selective and precise high-performance liquid chromatographic stability-indicating method for the determination of DTA in the presence of its acidic degradation product and in pharmaceutical formulation was developed and validated. Owing to the high toxicity of the degradation product, the kinetics of the acidic degradation process was monitored by the developed RP-HPLC method. The reaction was found to follow pseudo-first order kinetics. The kinetic parameters such as rate constant (K) and half-life (t½ ) were calculated under different temperatures and acid concentrations; activation energy was estimated from the Arrhenius plot. The developed RP-HPLC method depends on isocratic elution of a mobile phase composed of methanol-water (25:75 v/v; pH adjusted with phosphoric acid), and UV detection at 238 nm. The method showed good linearity over a concentration range of 2-100 µg/mL with mean percentage recovery of 100.04 ± 1.07. The selectivity of the proposed method was tested using laboratory-prepared mixtures. The proposed method has been successfully applied to the analysis of DTA in pharmaceutical dosage forms without interference from other dosage form additives and the results were statistically compared with the official USP method. Validation of the proposed method was performed according to International Conference on Harmonization guidelines.


Subject(s)
Chromatography, High Pressure Liquid/methods , Contrast Media/metabolism , Diatrizoate/metabolism , Contrast Media/analysis , Contrast Media/toxicity , Diatrizoate/analysis , Diatrizoate/toxicity , Drug Stability , Humans , Kinetics , Reproducibility of Results
4.
Spectrochim Acta A Mol Biomol Spectrosc ; 145: 254-259, 2015 Jun 15.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25791882

ABSTRACT

Three sensitive, selective, and precise stability indicating spectrophotometric methods for the determination of the X-ray contrast agent, diatrizoate sodium (DTA) in the presence of its acidic degradation product (highly cytotoxic 3,5-diamino metabolite) and in pharmaceutical formulation, were developed and validated. The first method is ratio difference, the second one is the bivariate method, and the third one is the dual wavelength method. The calibration curves for the three proposed methods are linear over a concentration range of 2-24 µg/mL. The selectivity of the proposed methods was tested using laboratory prepared mixtures. The proposed methods have been successfully applied to the analysis of DTA in pharmaceutical dosage forms without interference from other dosage form additives. The results were statistically compared with the official US pharmacopeial method. No significant difference for either accuracy or precision was observed.


Subject(s)
Diatrizoate/toxicity , Light , Spectrophotometry/methods , Cell Death/drug effects , Diatrizoate/chemistry , Diatrizoate Meglumine/analysis , Reference Standards , Reproducibility of Results
5.
Spectrochim Acta A Mol Biomol Spectrosc ; 136 Pt B: 1167-74, 2015 Feb 05.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25456658

ABSTRACT

Three sensitive, selective, and precise stability indicating methods for the determination of the X-ray contrast agent, diatrizoate sodium (DTA), in the presence of its acidic degradation product (highly cytotoxic 3,5 diamino metabolite) and in pharmaceutical formulation were developed and validated. The first method is a first derivative (D1) spectrophotometric one, which allows the determination of DTA in the presence of its degradate at 231.2 nm (corresponding to zero crossing of the degradate) over a concentration range of 2-24 µg/mL with mean percentage recovery 99.95±0.97%. The second method is the first derivative of the ratio spectra (DD1) by measuring the peak amplitude at 227 nm over the same concentration range as D1 spectrophotometric method, with mean percentage recovery 99.99±1.15%. The third method is a TLC-densitometric one, where DTA was separated from its degradate on silica gel plates using chloroform:methanol:ammonium hydroxide (20:10:2 by volume) as a developing system. This method depends on quantitative densitometric evaluation of thin layer chromatogram of DTA at 238 nm over a concentration range of 4-20 µg/spot, with mean percentage recovery 99.88±0.89%. The selectivity of the proposed methods was tested using laboratory-prepared mixtures. The proposed methods have been successfully applied to the analysis of DTA in pharmaceutical dosage forms without interference from other dosage form additives. The results were statistically compared with the official US pharmacopeial method. No significant difference for either accuracy or precision was observed.


Subject(s)
Densitometry/methods , Diatrizoate/analysis , Spectrophotometry/methods , Chromatography, Thin Layer , Diatrizoate/chemistry , Powders , Spectrophotometry, Infrared
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