| Literature DB >> 36249773 |
Maria Monagas1, Thomas Brendler2, Josef Brinckmann2, Steven Dentali2, Stefan Gafner2, Gabriel Giancaspro1, Holly Johnson2, James Kababick2, Cuiying Ma1, Hellen Oketch-Rabah1, Pilar Pais2, Nandu Sarma1, Robin Marles2.
Abstract
Dietary supplement current good manufacturing practice (cGMP) requires establishment of quality parameters for each component used in the manufacture of a dietary supplement to ensure that specifications for the identity, purity, strength, composition, and limits on contaminants are met. Compliance with botanical extract ingredient specifications is assured by using scientifically valid methods of analysis, the results of which are reported on certificates of analysis (CoAs). However, CoAs routinely include additional data that are not amenable to verification through methods of analysis. Such descriptive information may include Plant to Extract ratios, which are ratios of the quantity of botanical article used in the manufacture of the extract to the quantity of extract obtained. Plant to Extract ratios can be misleading when their meaning is not clearly understood. Plant to Extract ratios do not completely describe botanical extracts because other important factors influence the make-up of final extracts, such as the quality of the raw starting material (as can defined by pharmacopeial standards), extraction solvent(s) used, duration and temperature of extraction, and percentage and type of excipients present. Other important qualitative descriptions may include constituent "fingerprinting." Despite these issues, Plant to Extract ratios are often used as a measure of extract strength for dosage calculations. This article defines and clarifies the meaning of Plant to Extract ratios and their proper use in describing and labeling botanical extract ingredients and finished products containing them.Entities:
Keywords: botanical extract; drug to extract ratio (DER); genuine extract; herbal medicine; native extract; plant to extract ratio
Year: 2022 PMID: 36249773 PMCID: PMC9561911 DOI: 10.3389/fphar.2022.981978
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Pharmacol ISSN: 1663-9812 Impact factor: 5.988
Botanical extract types and forms.
| Extract type | Extract form | Definition | Examples of USP monographs |
|---|---|---|---|
| Fluidextract | Liquid | A type of liquid extract containing aqueous ethanol as a solvent or preservative, or both, made such that each 1 mL contains the extracted constituents of 1 g of the crude dry material that it represents, unless otherwise specified. | Black Cohosh Fluidextract |
| Garlic Fluidextract | |||
| Licorice Fluidextract | |||
| Tincture | Liquid | A type of liquid extract prepared with ethanol or hydroethanolic mixtures by maceration or percolation. Traditionally, tinctures of potent articles represent the activity of 1 g of the dry plant material in 10 mL of solvent, and in 5 mL for others. |
|
| Valerian Tincture | |||
| Soft Extract & Oleoresins | Semi-solid or viscous | Extract articles with consistencies intermediate between those of liquid and dry extracts, with a consistency of a thin to thick liquid or paste. They either naturally have this consistency, as is sometimes obtained by extraction with supercritical carbon dioxide, or have it by virtue of incomplete evaporation of the extraction solvent and/or naturally occurring water content of the original biomass. | Capsicum Oleoresin |
| Dry Extract | Solid | Dry extracts are solid articles, available for example in powder, flake, granule, or other forms, obtained by evaporation of the solvent used in their production. | Guarana Seed Dry Extract |
| Bitter Orange Fruit Flavonoids Dry Extract |
FIGURE 1Article of Botanical Origin for Turmeric (Curcuma longa L.) rhizome form intact plant material to single chemical entity [United States Pharmacopeia (USP), 2019].
Labeling of a finished product (capsule) containing Valerian Dry Extract according to EMA (European Medicines Agency (EMA), 2010)
| Ingredient | Finished Product (Capsule) |
|---|---|
| Dry extract from Valerian root | Quantity of the dry extract (genuine herbal preparation and other excipients) in the herbal medicinal product: 200 mg/capsule |
| Quantity of the genuine extract: 80% genuine extract | |
| DER genuine: 3–6: 1 | Label Disclosure: |
| Other excipients: 20% | Each capsule contains 160 mg of extract (as dry extract) from Valeriana officinalis L s.l., radix |
| Extraction solvent: Ethanol 70% V/V | (Valerian root) (3–6: 1) |
| Extraction solvent: Ethanol 70% V/V |
Best practices for labeling of finished product (capsule) according to USP General Chapter <565> Botanical Extracts (United States Pharmacopeia (USP))
| Ingredient | Finished Product (Capsule) |
|---|---|
| Plant to Extract ratio: 5:1 | Quantity of finished total extract in the finished product: 250 mg per capsule |
| Excipients: 20% | |
| Solvents: Water or hydroalcoholic mixtures | Label Disclosure: |
| Content: 3.0% of ginsenosides Rg1, Re, Rb1, Rc, Rb2, and Rd combined, calculated on the anhydrous basis | Each capsule contains 200 mg of Asian Ginseng (Panax ginseng) Root and Rhizome Dry Extract corresponding to 6 mg of ginsenosides Rg1, Re, Rb1, Rc, Rb2, and Rd combined |