Measuring degradation Flashcards

1
Q

In terms of drug stability, what does kinetics determine?

A

Extent of degradation over time

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2
Q

What does long term stability testing involve?

A

storing the products under realistic worst-case conditions of temperature and humidity

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3
Q

What are some limitations of accelerated stability?

A
  1. kinetics of degradation may change at higher temperatures
  2. Additional complex reactions may take place at higher temperatures
  3. Temperature may change the nature of the dosage form
  4. Change in physical properties with unpredictable effect
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4
Q

What does accelerated stability testing help you calculate

A

using an Arrhenius plot you can find the value of K at any temperature and estimate shelf-life

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5
Q

What problem does photodegradation cause in practice?

A

will reduce patient compliance

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6
Q

What are some typical forced conditions?

A
Acid hydrolysis in 0.1M HCL
Base hydrolysis in 0.1M NaOH
Temperature 50-60 degrees Celsius 
Humidity 70-80%
Oxidation 3-30% peroxide 
Light irradiation
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7
Q

What is the ideal range of degradation produced?

A

10-20%

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8
Q

What is SIM testing and what does it do

A

Stability indicating method

Determines loss in API content and build up of degradation products

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9
Q

What should a good SIM ideally be able to detect?

A

both API + degradation products simultaneously but not always possible.

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10
Q

What do you measure for quantitative analysis

A

peak heights and peak areas (preferred)

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11
Q

What is the external standard method?

A

concentrations calculated from the ratio of sample peak areas to the corresponding standard peak areas

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12
Q

In a HPLC chromatogram, what does a stepper gradient mean?

A

more rapid change in solvent composition - so will elute analytes faster

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13
Q

What is the internal standard method?

A

a more precise method, less chance of error from reproducibility & sample preparation concerns. Often used in pharmacokinetics where trace levels of drugs or metabolites are present in a biological matrix

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14
Q

Explain how you would conduct a quantitative analysis using an external standard

A
  1. Prepare standard solutions of known concentrations and run HPLC on each
  2. Plot area vs conc to get calibration curve
  3. Sample drug and dilute to conc that is around 50% on calibration curve
  4. Run HPLC of sample and find conc from area or from equation of best fit
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15
Q

Explain how you would conduct a quantitative analysis using an internal standard

A
  1. Add standard to analysis mixture
  2. Relative areas are compared and used to calculate conc
  3. Preferably sample preparation should be same for both sample and standard. Although in some assays the standard can be added after extraction
  4. Response factors are used to calculate unknown concentration by comparing sample solution with a calibration solution
    - The internal calibrant concentration is kept the same in both solutions
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16
Q

Why are placebo standards important?

A

To distinguish background peaks