Use of a Triple Detection (UV-ELSD-MS) System for Mass Balance in the Forced Degradation of Pharmaceuticals
Posters | 2025 | Waters | ASMSInstrumentation
The integrity of mass balance in forced degradation studies is essential for ensuring the safety and efficacy of pharmaceutical products. Triple detection systems combining photodiode array (PDA), evaporative light scattering (ELSD) and mass spectrometry (MS) deliver comprehensive analytical data that improves impurity profiling and pathway elucidation.
This work evaluates a UPLC system with UV, ELSD and QDa MS detectors to perform accurate mass balance during acid-induced degradation of glimepiride. The study demonstrates determination of relative response factors (RRF) for impurities and application of these values in data processing software to achieve quantitative mass conservation.
A Waters ACQUITY UPLC H-Class system equipped with a BEH C18 column operated under isocratic conditions (60% aqueous 0.1% formic acid/40% acetonitrile) at 30 °C and 0.8 mL/min was used. Detection included a PDA scanning 210–400 nm, an ELSD with log-linear response, and a QDa mass detector. A preconfigured splitter and isocratic solvent manager supplied makeup flow to ELSD and MS. Glimepiride and impurities B and C were calibrated at multiple levels in methanol/water and degraded in 0.1 M HCl at 40 °C for up to seven days.
Calibration curves in the PDA channel were linear for all analytes, while ELSD responses required logarithmic transformation for linearity. RRFs for impurities B and C were calculated using UV versus log(ELSD) slopes, yielding values within and slightly beyond the USP <621> acceptance range. Incorporating these RRFs into Empower 3 FR2 software enabled corrected peak area calculations. Forced degradation of glimepiride showed increasing impurity formation, with mass balance consistently within 98–102% over seven days.
Advancements may include high-resolution MS integration for structural elucidation, machine-learning algorithms for automated RRF prediction, and expansion to stability studies under varied stress conditions. Such developments will further streamline regulatory compliance and accelerate formulation optimization.
The triple detection approach combining PDA, ELSD and MS, alongside appropriate RRF determination, delivers robust mass balance in forced degradation studies. It ensures comprehensive impurity profiling, accurate quantification, and seamless data handling, meeting regulatory quality requirements.
HPLC
IndustriesPharma & Biopharma
ManufacturerWaters
Summary
Importance of Topic
The integrity of mass balance in forced degradation studies is essential for ensuring the safety and efficacy of pharmaceutical products. Triple detection systems combining photodiode array (PDA), evaporative light scattering (ELSD) and mass spectrometry (MS) deliver comprehensive analytical data that improves impurity profiling and pathway elucidation.
Objectives and Study Overview
This work evaluates a UPLC system with UV, ELSD and QDa MS detectors to perform accurate mass balance during acid-induced degradation of glimepiride. The study demonstrates determination of relative response factors (RRF) for impurities and application of these values in data processing software to achieve quantitative mass conservation.
Methodology and Instrumentation Employed
A Waters ACQUITY UPLC H-Class system equipped with a BEH C18 column operated under isocratic conditions (60% aqueous 0.1% formic acid/40% acetonitrile) at 30 °C and 0.8 mL/min was used. Detection included a PDA scanning 210–400 nm, an ELSD with log-linear response, and a QDa mass detector. A preconfigured splitter and isocratic solvent manager supplied makeup flow to ELSD and MS. Glimepiride and impurities B and C were calibrated at multiple levels in methanol/water and degraded in 0.1 M HCl at 40 °C for up to seven days.
Key Results and Discussion
Calibration curves in the PDA channel were linear for all analytes, while ELSD responses required logarithmic transformation for linearity. RRFs for impurities B and C were calculated using UV versus log(ELSD) slopes, yielding values within and slightly beyond the USP <621> acceptance range. Incorporating these RRFs into Empower 3 FR2 software enabled corrected peak area calculations. Forced degradation of glimepiride showed increasing impurity formation, with mass balance consistently within 98–102% over seven days.
Practical Benefits of the Method
- Enhanced impurity detection through orthogonal detector responses.
- Reliable quantification via RRF correction across detectors.
- Integrated mass balance reporting within chromatographic software.
Future Trends and Potential Applications
Advancements may include high-resolution MS integration for structural elucidation, machine-learning algorithms for automated RRF prediction, and expansion to stability studies under varied stress conditions. Such developments will further streamline regulatory compliance and accelerate formulation optimization.
Conclusion
The triple detection approach combining PDA, ELSD and MS, alongside appropriate RRF determination, delivers robust mass balance in forced degradation studies. It ensures comprehensive impurity profiling, accurate quantification, and seamless data handling, meeting regulatory quality requirements.
References
- United States Pharmacopeia. Chapter <621> Chromatography. USP 37–NF 32 S1; United Book Press: Baltimore, MD, 2014; pp 6376–6385.
- Mark AN, Andreas K, Patrick JJ. Role of Mass Balance in Pharmaceutical Stress Testing. In Pharmaceutical Stress Testing; CRC Press: 2011; pp 233–253.
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