药物稳定性的表征-分析方法-资讯-生物在线

药物稳定性的表征

作者:美国TA仪器 2015-11-27T00:00 (访问量:1789)

 Characterization of Drug Stability

Christin T. Choma

TA Instruments, 109 Lukens Drive, New Castle, DE 19720, USA

The shelf life of a pharmaceutical depends ultimately on the stability of the active pharmaceutical ingredient in the formulation. The most common method for characterizing the stability of a new drug candidate is to stress it at elevated temperatures. Using microcalorimetry, samples can be thermally stressed while simultaneously exposing the compound to other degradative conditions such as high or low pH, high humidity, hydrogen peroxide, etc. The rate of heat evolution by the sample under different stressing conditions provides a direct indication of the stability of the compound under those conditions. Since the measurements are generally completed in a matter of hours, calorimetry provides a rapid approach for screening the stability of compounds; more traditional approaches such as HPLC can then be used to determine the degradation products produced over time.

A pharmaceutical compound (10 mg/mL) was dissolved at pH 4 and at pH 10, then both samples were simultaneously heated in a MC-DSC. Thermal activity was evident, indicative of chemical reactions occurring in the samples. Under basic conditions the reaction was endothermic, while in acidic conditions the reaction was exothermic. When the logarithm of the thermal activity was plotted versus the reciprocal temperature, it became apparent that there were at least two reaction pathways with different activation energies at pH 10, while at pH 4 there was only evidence of a single degradative reaction. This information would be very useful in designing traditional HPLC stability screening studies since under basic conditions, this compound should clearly be stressed at lower rather than higher temperatures.

美国TA仪器 商家主页

地 址: 徐汇区漕河泾开发区钦州北路1188号科汇大厦1601室

联系人: 董传波

电 话: 021-34182000

传 真: 021-64951999

Email:info@tainstruments.com.cn; jshi@tainstruments.com

相关咨询
ADVERTISEMENT