| Literature DB >> 26798176 |
D Sharmila1, A Lakshmana Rao1, L Kalyani1.
Abstract
The present study depicts the development of a validated reversed-phase high performance liquid chromatographic method for the determination of the everolimus in presence of degradation products or pharmaceutical excipients. Stress study was performed on everolimus and it was found that it degrade sufficiently in oxidizing and acidic conditions but less degradation was found in alkaline, neutral, thermal and photolytic conditions. The separation was carried out on Hypersil BDS C18 column (100×4.6 mm, 5 μ) column having particle size 5 μ using acetate buffer:acetonitrile (50:50 v/v) with pH 6.5 adjusted with orthophosphoric acid as mobile phase at flow rate of 1 ml/min. The wavelength of the detection was 280 nm. A retention time (Rt) nearly 3.110 min was observed. The calibration curve for everolimus was linear (r(2)=0.999) from range of 25-150 μg/ml with limit of detection and limit of quantification of 0.036 μg/ml and 0.109 μg/ml, respectively. Analytical validation parameters such as selectivity, specificity, linearity, accuracy and precision were evaluated and relative standard deviation value for all the key parameters were less than 2.0%. The recovery of the drug after standard addition was found to be 100.55%. Thus, the developed RP-HPLC method was found to be suitable for the determination of everolimus in tablets containing various excipients.Entities:
Keywords: Everolimus; reversed-phase high performance liquid chromatographic; stability; validation
Year: 2015 PMID: 26798176 PMCID: PMC4700714 DOI: 10.4103/0250-474x.169044
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Indian J Pharm Sci ISSN: 0250-474X Impact factor: 0.975
Fig. 1Chemical structure of everolimus.
Fig. 2Typical standard chromatogram of everolimus.
CONDITION USED FOR CHROMATOGRAPHY ANALYSIS
SUMMARY OF VALIDATION PARAMETERS
ACCURACY DATA OF EVEROLIMUS
ASSAY OF FORMULATION
Fig. 3Chromatograms of stress conditions of everolimus.
(a) Acidic degradation, (b) alkaline degradation, (c) neutral degradation, (d) oxidizing degradation, (e) thermal degradation, (f) photolytic degradation.