| Literature DB >> 29080412 |
Hervé Rebiere1, Maxime Martin2, Céline Ghyselinck3, Pierre-Antoine Bonnet4, Charlotte Brenier3.
Abstract
Falsified drugs are a threat to the health of patients. The analytical control of such products contributes to the fight against this global issue. Raman chemical imaging is a method that relies on consecutive measurements at the surface of a sample, combining spectroscopy, microscopy and chemometrics. This article explores the capabilities of this analytical technique proposing an innovative methodology with spectroscopic screening for the identification of chemical compounds and the direct quantification of the active substance (without prior calibration). Two chemometric methods were used: Multivariate Curve Analysis - Alternate Least Squares for the qualitative analysis and Direct Classical Least Squares for the quantitative analysis. The methodology was optimized with samples prepared in the laboratory and validation parameters were studied. The methodology was then applied to real (authentic and falsified) samples of Viagra® and Plavix®. Despite the presence of fluorescence emission in some samples, the methodology succeeded in the detection of active pharmaceutical ingredients, and in the discrimination of three salts of clopidogrel (in generic formulations of Plavix®). The quantitative deviation from the reference method ranged from -15% to +24% of the active substance content. This deviation may be considered to be acceptable since it is sufficient for assessing the risk to the health of patients and for quickly alerting the health authorities.Entities:
Keywords: Chemical imaging; Chemometrics; Counterfeit; Direct quantification; Falsification; Raman
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Year: 2017 PMID: 29080412 DOI: 10.1016/j.jpba.2017.10.005
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Pharm Biomed Anal ISSN: 0731-7085 Impact factor: 3.935