Fast Determination of Inorganic Counterions in a Pharmaceutical Drug Using High-Pressure Capillary Ion Chromatography
Applications | 2016 | Thermo Fisher ScientificInstrumentation
The selection and quantification of inorganic counterions in pharmaceutical agents is critical because half of marketed drugs are salts, where the choice of counterion influences solubility, stability, and bioavailability. Ion chromatography with suppressed conductivity detection provides reliable, sensitive analysis for counterion profiling.
This work demonstrates a fast, high-pressure capillary ion chromatography method to determine chloride counterion in a type 2 diabetes drug. It aims to shorten analysis time, reduce eluent consumption, and maintain robust performance for pharmaceutical quality control.
The optimized method achieved chloride separation in under 8 minutes at 24 µL/min compared with 15 minutes at 12 µL/min. The chloride peak corresponded to 16.6 mg/L in solution, equating to 0.453 mg per tablet. Carbonate was monitored but not detected under reported conditions.
The capillary HPIC approach offers a rapid, robust solution for determining chloride counterions in pharmaceutical tablets, with minimal reagent use and high analytical throughput, supporting both early-stage salt selection and routine quality control.
Ion chromatography
IndustriesPharma & Biopharma
ManufacturerThermo Fisher Scientific
Summary
Importance of the Topic
The selection and quantification of inorganic counterions in pharmaceutical agents is critical because half of marketed drugs are salts, where the choice of counterion influences solubility, stability, and bioavailability. Ion chromatography with suppressed conductivity detection provides reliable, sensitive analysis for counterion profiling.
Study Objectives and Overview
This work demonstrates a fast, high-pressure capillary ion chromatography method to determine chloride counterion in a type 2 diabetes drug. It aims to shorten analysis time, reduce eluent consumption, and maintain robust performance for pharmaceutical quality control.
Methodology and Instrumentation
- Instrumentation: Thermo Fisher Scientific Dionex ICS-5000 Capillary HPIC system with AS-AP autosampler and Chromeleon software.
- Column: Dionex IonSwift MAX-100 monolithic capillary column (0.25 mm i.d.).
- Eluent: Gradient of KOH generated by Thermo Scientific Dionex EGC-KOH (Capillary) cartridge; suppression by Thermo Scientific Dionex ACES 300 suppressor.
- Flow rates: 12 µL/min (standard) and 24 µL/min (accelerated), generating ~4500 psi backpressure.
- Sample preparation: Tablet dissolved in water at elevated temperature, filtered, treated with OnGuard RP cartridge, and diluted 1:10.
Main Results and Discussion
The optimized method achieved chloride separation in under 8 minutes at 24 µL/min compared with 15 minutes at 12 µL/min. The chloride peak corresponded to 16.6 mg/L in solution, equating to 0.453 mg per tablet. Carbonate was monitored but not detected under reported conditions.
Benefits and Practical Applications
- High throughput with sub-8-minute run times.
- Low eluent and water consumption (~15 mL/day) and reduced laboratory waste.
- Extended cartridge lifetime (up to 18 months) lowers cost of ownership.
- System remains continuously ready for analysis, enhancing lab efficiency.
Future Trends and Potential Applications
- Integration with automated sample preparation for further throughput gains.
- Expansion to multi-ion profiling during drug development and stability testing.
- Application in impurity profiling and regulatory compliance workflows.
Conclusion
The capillary HPIC approach offers a rapid, robust solution for determining chloride counterions in pharmaceutical tablets, with minimal reagent use and high analytical throughput, supporting both early-stage salt selection and routine quality control.
References
- Thermo Fisher Scientific. Quantification of Anions in Pharmaceuticals, Application Note 116, LPN 0924, 2007.
- Wermuth CG; Stahl PH. Handbook of Pharmaceutical Salts: Properties, Selection and Use, Wiley-VCH, 2002, pp. 1–7.
- Berge SM; Bighley LM; Monkhouse DC. Pharmaceutical Salts, J. Pharm. Sci. 1977;66(1):1–19.
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