Quantitative determination of residual active pharmaceutical ingredients and intermediates on equipment surfaces by ion mobility spectrometry

التفاصيل البيبلوغرافية
العنوان: Quantitative determination of residual active pharmaceutical ingredients and intermediates on equipment surfaces by ion mobility spectrometry
المؤلفون: C. Qin, Vladimir Papov, John McCaffrey, Alice T. Granger, Daniel L. Norwood
المصدر: Journal of pharmaceutical and biomedical analysis. 51(1)
سنة النشر: 2009
مصطلحات موضوعية: Detection limit, Active ingredient, Chromatography, Time Factors, Atmospheric pressure, Drug Industry, Chemistry, Ion-mobility spectrometry, Instrumentation, Spectrum Analysis, Clinical Biochemistry, Analytical technique, Pharmaceutical Science, Reproducibility of Results, Analytical Chemistry, Pharmaceutical Preparations, Drug Discovery, Pharmaceutical manufacturing, Equipment Contamination, Quantitative analysis (chemistry), Spectroscopy
الوصف: Ion mobility spectrometry (IMS) is an analytical technique that separates ions based on their gas phase mobility at atmospheric pressure. Since gas phase ion mobility is a function of the shape and structure of the ion, this technique has the potential to provide unique specificity and selectivity. Furthermore, IMS is very sensitive (subnanogram detection limits for many small molecules), and a single analysis is typically completed within 1 min. In principle, these features of IMS should make it an ideal choice for use in cleaning verification analysis of pharmaceutical manufacturing equipment. This report describes the successful development and validation of three different equipment cleaning verification methods using IMS. The methods were developed for a specific intermediate (Compound A) in the synthetic route for a drug substance as well as for final drug substances (active pharmaceutical ingredients Compounds B and C). The cleaning verification methods were validated with respect to specificity, linearity, precision, accuracy, stability, and limit-of-quantitation. In all cases, the limits-of-quantitation were determined to be at the nanogram or sub-nanogram level. Both swab and rinse samples collected from the equipment surfaces were successfully analyzed and manufacturing equipment down-time was significantly minimized due to the reduction in cleaning verification analysis time (for example, the total analysis time for more than 30 samples using IMS was reduced to less than 2h).
تدمد: 1873-264X
URL الوصول: https://explore.openaire.eu/search/publication?articleId=doi_dedup___::1ea60123fb5344648fdb1d8809202444
https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/19758781
حقوق: CLOSED
رقم الأكسشن: edsair.doi.dedup.....1ea60123fb5344648fdb1d8809202444
قاعدة البيانات: OpenAIRE