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Impurities test for Piracetam (EP-8.0 method)

Applications |  | Thermo Fisher ScientificInstrumentation
HPLC
Industries
Pharma & Biopharma
Manufacturer
Thermo Fisher Scientific

Summary

Impurities Test for Piracetam: EP-8.0 Method


Importance of the Topic


The control of impurities in pharmaceutical compounds is critical for ensuring product safety, efficacy and compliance with regulatory standards. Piracetam, a nootropic agent, requires precise analytical methods to detect trace levels of related substances that may arise during synthesis or storage. Accurate impurity profiling supports quality assurance, risk assessment and patient safety.

Objectives and Study Overview


This study presents the official European Pharmacopoeia version 8.0 procedure for detecting impurities in Piracetam. The goals are to define sample preparation steps, chromatographic conditions, and system suitability criteria to reliably separate Piracetam from its potential impurities, quantify resolution and peak symmetry, and demonstrate method robustness.

Methodology and Used Instrumentation


Sample Preparation
  • Test Solution (a): 50.0 mg Piracetam in acetonitrile–water (10:90 v/v) diluted to 100.0 ml.
  • Test Solution (b): 10.0 ml of solution (a) diluted to 50 ml with the same solvent mixture.
  • Reference Solutions:
    • (a) 5 mg Piracetam + 10 µl 2-pyrrolidine in 10:90 acetonitrile–water, diluted to 100.0 ml.
    • (b) Dilution of solution (a) to prepare a series matching impurity levels.
    • (c) 50.0 mg Piracetam in 10:90 acetonitrile–water, diluted to 100.0 ml for peak identification.
Chromatographic Conditions
  • Instrument: UltiMate 3000 LC system.
  • Column: Syncronis C18, 4.6 × 150 mm, 5 µm particle size.
  • Mobile Phase: Acetonitrile and buffer (10:90 v/v), pH adjusted to 6.0 with dilute phosphoric acid.
  • Buffer Composition: 1.0 g/L dipotassium hydrogen phosphate in water.
  • Mode: Isocratic, flow rate 1.0 ml/min, column temperature 25 °C.
  • Injection Volume: 20 µl, detection at 205 nm UV, run time 25 minutes.

Main Results and Discussion


System suitability parameters confirm the method’s performance:
  • Resolution between Piracetam and Impurity A: obtained 4.77 (USP requires ≥ 3.0), indicating clear separation.
  • Symmetry factor for the Piracetam peak: obtained 1.16 (USP requires ≤ 2.0), demonstrating acceptable peak shape.
The chromatograms show baseline separation of all critical peaks within the 25-minute runtime. This robust retention and selectivity ensure reliable quantification of low-level impurities.

Benefits and Practical Applications


The validated procedure offers:
  • High sensitivity for detecting related substances at trace levels.
  • Reproducible chromatographic performance suitable for routine quality control.
  • Compliance with Ph. Eur. standards, facilitating regulatory approval and batch release.
Laboratories can adopt this method for stability testing, batch qualification and impurity profiling during development.

Future Trends and Potential Applications


Advances may include coupling with high-resolution mass spectrometry for impurity identification, automation to increase throughput, and green solvent alternatives to reduce environmental impact. Data analytics and predictive modeling could further streamline impurity risk management in drug development.

Conclusion


The EP-8.0 method for Piracetam impurity testing provides a robust, sensitive and regulatory-compliant HPLC protocol. Key performance metrics exceed USP criteria, ensuring reliable detection and quantification of related substances. Adoption of this method enhances quality control and safeguards patient health.

Content was automatically generated from an orignal PDF document using AI and may contain inaccuracies.

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