| Literature DB >> 23933565 |
Dheeraj Kaushik1, Gulshan Bansal.
Abstract
Idarubicin was subjected to forced degradation under the ICH recommended conditions of hydrolysis, oxidation, dry heat and photolysis to characterize its possible impurities and/or degradation products. The drug was found unstable to acid hydrolysis at 85°C and to alkaline hydrolysis, and oxidation at room temperature. The hydrolytic and oxidative degradation products were resolved with gradient and isocratic elution, respectively on an Inertsil RP18 (250 mm × 4.6mm; 5 μ) column with HCOONH4 (20mM, pH 3.0) and acetonitrile. The drug degraded to two products (O-I and O-II) in oxidative condition, two products (K-I and K-II) in alkaline hydrolytic, and one product (A-I) in acidic hydrolytic conditions. The purity of each in the LC-UV chromatogram was ascertained through LC-PDA analysis. The products were characterized through +ESI-MS(n) studies on the drug and LC-MS-TOF studies on the degraded drug solutions. Based on the multistage mass fragmentation pattern of idarubicin and accurate mass analysis of the degradation products, the O-I, O-II and A-I were characterized as desacetylidarubicin hydroperoxide, desacetylidarubicin and deglucosaminylidarubicin, respectively. The products K-I and K-II were not characterized due to their low concentrations and/or extremely weak ionization. The mechanisms of degradation of idarubicin to these products were proposed and discussed.Entities:
Keywords: Degradation product; Forced degradation; Idarubicin; LC-MS-TOF; Mass fragmentation
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Year: 2013 PMID: 23933565 DOI: 10.1016/j.jpba.2013.07.002
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Pharm Biomed Anal ISSN: 0731-7085 Impact factor: 3.935