This method validates a liquid chromatographic method for analyzing azithromycin in raw materials and pharmaceutical formulations. A reversed-phase C18 column is used with isocratic elution of a phosphate buffer-methanol mobile phase. The method is validated according to USP requirements and shown to have sufficient selectivity, sensitivity, accuracy, precision, and linearity to meet regulatory standards. Impurities and degradation products of azithromycin are also resolved with this stability-indicating method.
This method validates a liquid chromatographic method for analyzing azithromycin in raw materials and pharmaceutical formulations. A reversed-phase C18 column is used with isocratic elution of a phosphate buffer-methanol mobile phase. The method is validated according to USP requirements and shown to have sufficient selectivity, sensitivity, accuracy, precision, and linearity to meet regulatory standards. Impurities and degradation products of azithromycin are also resolved with this stability-indicating method.
This method validates a liquid chromatographic method for analyzing azithromycin in raw materials and pharmaceutical formulations. A reversed-phase C18 column is used with isocratic elution of a phosphate buffer-methanol mobile phase. The method is validated according to USP requirements and shown to have sufficient selectivity, sensitivity, accuracy, precision, and linearity to meet regulatory standards. Impurities and degradation products of azithromycin are also resolved with this stability-indicating method.
This method validates a liquid chromatographic method for analyzing azithromycin in raw materials and pharmaceutical formulations. A reversed-phase C18 column is used with isocratic elution of a phosphate buffer-methanol mobile phase. The method is validated according to USP requirements and shown to have sufficient selectivity, sensitivity, accuracy, precision, and linearity to meet regulatory standards. Impurities and degradation products of azithromycin are also resolved with this stability-indicating method.
A simple, validated stability-indicating liquid chromatographic
method is developed for the analysis of azithromycin in raw
material and in pharmaceutical forms. Liquid chromatography with a UV detector at a wavelength of 210 nm using a reversed-phase C 18 stationary phase has been employed in this study. Isocratic elution is employed using a mixture of phosphate buffermethanol (20:80). This new method is validated in accordance with USP requirements for new methods for assay determination, which include accuracy, precision, specificity, linearity, and range. This method shows enough selectivity, sensitivity, accuracy, precision, and linearity range to satisfy Federal Drug Administration and International Conference of Harmonization regulatory requirements. The current method demonstrates good linearity over the range of 0.32.0 mg/mL of azithromycin. The accuracy of the method is 100.5% with a relative standard deviation of 0.2%. The precision of this method reflected by relative standard deviation of replicates is 0.2%. The method is sensitive with a detection limit of 0.0005 mg/mL for azithromycin. Impurities and degradation products of azithromycin can be selectively determined with a good resolution in both raw material and pharmaceutical forms. Introduction Azithromycin is a macrolide antibiotic related to erythro- mycin (Figure 1). It is used primarily to treat various bacterial infections caused by respiratory pathogens, such as aerobic Gram-positive and Gram-negative bacteria. Azithromycin pre- vents bacterial cells frommanufacturing specific proteins neces- sary for their survival. Azithromycin is rapidly absorbed and is widely distributed to tissues and becomes concentrated in cells. Peak plasma concentrations are achieved within 2 to 3 h (1). Because azithromycin is obtained fromerythromycin, impuri- ties present will undergo the same modifications and the azithromycin analogues of these impurities can be found in azithromycin bulk samples. In addition, degradation products of azithromycin as well as intermediate compounds of the semi- synthesis may be present (2); for instance, azithromycin is rapidly decomposed in acidic solution via intra-molecular dehy- dration to form erythromycin-6,6-hemiketal and then anhy- droerythromycin (3). It is very difficult to determine small amounts of degradation products in a vast excess of parent drug and even more so when the compounds do not present a chro- mophore as this makes their detection more difficult (4). Azithromycin has been analyzed by high-performance liquid chromatography1(HPLC) using electrochemical (5,6), fluores- cence (7), mass spectrometry (8), and UV (9,10) for detection in bulk material and pharmaceutical forms. The USP method (11) describes the use of a high pH mobile phase (pH 11.0), which requires the use of a specific column, which is expensive and dif- ficult to obtain commercially. Also, the USP method employs amperometric electrochemical detection, which is not available in many laboratories. A comprehensive, validated, and simple analysis method for azithromycin and its related substances, impurities, and degradation products is, therefore, crucial. HPLCwith UV detector is a good selection as UV detector is avail- able in most laboratories. Liquid chromatography with UV detection has been already employed for the analysis of azithromycin in azithromycin tablets (4), in rawmaterial, and in azithromycin tablets (9,10). In the current work, an HPLC method with UV detector will be developed for the determination of azithromycin and other related compounds, impurities, degradation products in raw material as well as in new pharmaceutical formulations: dry sus- pension and capsules. Validation of the method will be performed according to the requirements of USP for assay determination, which include accuracy, precision, specificity, linearity, and range. Additionally, in order to meet the regulatory guidance of the Federal Drug Administration\International Conference of Harmonization (ICH) (12), azithromycin will be forcibly degraded in acidic, basic, and strong oxidizing agent solutions. The method is able to detect and quantitatively estimate the degradation products generated. 86 Abstract Analysis of Azithromycin and Its Related Compounds by RP-HPLC with UV Detection Fuad Al-Rimawi 1 and Maher Kharoaf 2 1 Faculty of Science and Technology, Al-Quds University, P.O. Box 20002, East Jerusalem and 2 Jerusalem Pharmaceuticals Company, Ramallah, Palestine Reproduction (photocopying) of editorial content of this journal is prohibited without publishers permission. Journal of Chromatographic Science, Vol. 48, February 2010 *Author to whom correspondence should be addressed: email fuad_12345@yahoo.com. Figure 1. Structure of azithromycin. Journal of Chromatographic Science, Vol. 48, February 2010 87 Experimental Chemicals HPLC-grade methanol was from J.T. Baker (Phillipsburg, NJ). Potassium dihydrogen phosphate, hydrochloric acid, sodium hydroxide, and hydrogen peroxide are from Merck (Darmstadt, Germany). Azithromycin RS, azaerythromycin RS, desosaminyl- azithromycin RS, and N-demethylazithromycin RS are from USP (Rockville, MD). Apparatus HPLC system (Merck Hitachi Lachrome Elite HPLC system, Tokyo, Japan) with an L-2130 pump, an L-2200 autosampler, L- 2300 column oven, and L-2490 UV detector was employed. The Ezochrom Elite software was employed. The chromatographic analysis was performed on HX749288, LiChroCart, HPLC-car- trage Purospher STAR RP-18 endcapped (5 m), (150 mm length, 4.6 mm inner diameter) (Waters, Milford, MA), as well as on RP-8 endcapped (5 m), (150 mm length, 4.6 mm inner diameter) (Waters). The column is stored at 50C. Standard solutions and HPLC conditions Phosphate buffer was prepared by dissolving 4.55 g of potas- sium dihydrogen phosphate in 1000 mL of water (0.3 M), adjusted to different pHs (6.0, 6.5, 7.0, and 7.5) with 10%sodium hydroxide solution. Different volume fractions of methanol (50, 60, 70, 80, and 90) have been used for the mobile phase. A filtered and degassed mixture of phosphate buffer (different pH), and methanol (different volume fractions) has been tested as a mobile phase for the separation of azithromycin and other related compounds. The best combination was 80% methanol and 20% buffer with pH 7.5. For this combination, different buffer concentrations have been tested (0.020, 0.030, and 0.050 M). The optimum concentration for the mobile phase was found to be 0.03 M. Different column temperatures (40, 50, and 60C), as well as different flow rates (1.0, 1.5, and 2.0 mL/min) have been tested. UV detection was performed at 210 nm, and injec- tion volume was 20 L. Stock standard solution was prepared by dissolving a quantity of azithromycin dihydrate equivalent to 500 mg of azithromycin base in 50 mL of mobile phase to obtain a solution having a known concentration of 10 mg/mL azithromycin. Nominal standard solution was prepared by diluting 5 mL of stock standard solution to 50 mL mobile phase to obtain a solu- tion having a known concentration of 1.0 mg/mL azithromycin. Nominal solutions of the formulated azithromycin capsules (Zitrocin 250 mg/capsule) were prepared by dissolving a quantity equivalent to 250 mg of azithromycin (~ 480 mg of the capsules powder which is the average weight of the capsules) in a 250 mL the mobile phase. The nominal solutions of the formulated azithromycin dry suspension (Zitrocin dry suspension contains 200 mg of azithromycin in each 5 mL after reconstitution) is prepared by reconstituting the dry suspension bottle with the quantity of water specified by the label on the bottle and taking a volume of 5 mL, which is equivalent to 200 mg of azithromycin and dis- solving it with a quantity of the mobile phase sufficient to give 200 mL of the solution. Results and Discussion Method development We have started method development by testing two reversed- phase stationary phases: C 8 and C 18 . Azithromycin has retention on both C 8 and C 18 stationary phases; however, C 18 shows better resolution and separation of related compounds and impurities from azithromycin compared to C 8 . Therefore, C 18 reversed- phase column, 5 mm, 25, or 15 cm length and 4.6 mm inner diameter has been used for this method. Problems when ana- lyzing basic drugs, such as azithromycin, are known in the phar- maceutical industry, as these compounds interact strongly with the polar ends of HPLC column packing materials, causing peak asymmetry and low separation efficiencies. However, we have not encountered these problems using this reversed-phase sta- tionary phase. Regarding the mobile phase, a mixture of phosphate buffer and methanol was used. In order to improve the separation and peak symmetry, the chromatographic variables: buffer concen- tration, buffer pH, temperature, and methanol percentage have been investigated. Phosphate buffer with high pH (7.5) was used to avoid problems with silica dissolution. Moreover, the stability of azithromycin and related compounds is low in acidic media. Phosphate buffer concentration has been varied until optimum concentration (0.03M) has been obtained. Additionally, different methanol percentages in the mobile phase have been tested to get optimum separation and resolution of azithromycin and its related compounds. 80% of methanol was found to be the Figure 2. Chromatogram of azithromycin and its related compounds. Analytes: 1, Desosaminylazithromycin; 2, N-demethylazithromycin; and 3, Azithromycin. Mobile phase: methanolphosphate buffer, pH 7.5 (80:20, v/v), flow rate 2.0 mL/min, injection volume 20 mL. Column: reversed phase C18, 5 mm, 25 cm length, 4.6 mm inner diameter, column temperature: 50C. UV detection: 210 nm. Time (min) A U Table I. Chromatographic Parameters for the Separated Peaks in Figure 2 Parameter Desosaminylazithromycin N-Demethylazithromycin Azithromycin Resolution 2.1 5.3 Capacity factor 2.8 3.3 7.7 Asymmetry 1.09 1.18 1.32 Selectivity 1.18 2.33 optimum percentage. Temperature was increased to facilitate mass exchange with the corresponding decrease of peak broad- ening and increase in sensitivity; 50C was a good selection. We have selected low wavelength (210 nm) to be used for UV detec- tion due to the lack of chromophores other than the ester group (Figure 1). In the current study, the elution is simplified by using isocratic elution (80:20, methanolbuffer) with a flow rate of 2.0 mL/min, compared with gradient elution employed by Miguel et. al for the separation of azithromycin and its related substances (4). After this optimization, this method has been used for the sep- aration of azithromycin from its related compounds (e.g., des- osaminylazithromycin and N-demethylazithromycin) (Figure 2) as well as separation from azaerythromycin A (Figure 3). Good separation with adequate resolution has been obtained (Figures 23). Chromatographic parameters of the separated peaks (desosaminylazithromycin, N-demethylazithromycin, and azithromycin) (Table I). Method validation After method development, the validation of the current test method for azithromycin has been performed in accordance with USP requirements for assay determination (Category I: Analytical methods for quantitation of active ingredients in fin- ished pharmaceutical products), which include accuracy, preci- sion, specificity, linearity, and range (13). Linearity and range Linearity is the ability of a method to elicit test results that are directly proportional to analyte concentration within a given range. Linearity is generally reported as the variance of the slope of the regression line. Range is the interval between the upper and lower levels of the analyte that have been demonstrated to be determined with precision, accuracy, and linearity using the method as written. The range is normally expressed in the same units as the test results obtained by the method. A minimum of five concentration levels along with certain minimum specified ranges are required. For assay, the minimum specified range is from 80120% of the target concentration. For content unifor- mity testing, the minimumrange is from70130%of the test or target concentration (14). Acceptance criteria for linearity are that the correlation coeffi- cient (R 2 ) is not less than 0.990 for the least squares method of analysis of the line. Additionally, the relative standard deviation (RSD) will not be greater than 5.0% at all standard concentra- tions (14). Standard solutions covering the range between 30120% of the nominal standard concentration (1.0 mg/mL azithromycin) have been prepared by diluting specific volume of the stock stan- dard to get several concentrations (0.3, 0.4, 0.5, 0.6, 0.8, 1.0, 1.20, 1.60, and 2.0 mg/mL). Then, these standards have been chro- matographed using UV detector at 210 nm. Three runs have been performed for every concentration. The peak responses (e.g., peak area) have been recorded and plotted versus standard con- centrations. Results have shown that the method is linear over the specified range with R 2 of 0.9999, insignificant y-intercept (6977), and a slope of 3 100 6 has also been obtained. Standard Journal of Chromatographic Science, Vol. 48, February 2010 88 Figure 3. Chromatogram of 1, azaerythromycin (capacity factor and peak asymmetry for azaerythromycin peak are 2.85 and 1.06, respectively); and 2, azithromycin (resolution, capacity factor, peak asymmetry, and selectivity for azithromycin peak are 6.4, 4.70, 1.09, and 1.64, respectively). Other exper- imental conditions are the same as in Figure 2 except for the length of the column, which was 15 cm instead of 25 cm. Time (min) A U Figure 4. Chromatogramof 1, azithromycin (1.0 mg/mL azithromycin, added to it 10% of 2M sodium hydroxide). Other experimental conditions are the same as in Figure 2. Resolution, capacity factor, and peak asymmetry for azithromycin peak are 5.3, 4.45, and 1.19, respectively. Time (min) A U Table II. Accuracy (recovery) of Azithromycin in Capsules and Dry Suspension Formulations at Three Concentration Levels as well as in Raw Material at the Nominal Conc. Azithromycin % Accuracy (recovery) RSD for 3 replicates Conc. Raw Dry Raw Dry (mg/mL) material Capsules suspension material Capsules suspension 0.8 99.9 99.5 0.8% 0.3% 1.0 99.6 100.0 100.0 0.8% 0.3% 0.8% 1.20 101.3 99.9 0.9% 0.5% Table III. Precision of Azithromycin Analysis in Capsules and Dry Suspension Formulations at Three Concentration Levels, as well as in Raw Material at the Nominal Conc. Azithromycin RSD conc. (mg/mL) Raw material Capsules Dry suspension 0.8 0.8% 0.3% 1.0 0.2% 0.3% 0.8% 1.20 0.9% 0.5% deviation of the slope and y-intercept is 145,921 and 15,761, respectively. Standard error was 23,798. These findings demon- strate linearity of this method over the specified range. The obtained R 2 value for the current method (0.9999) is com- parable to the value obtained by Zubata et. al (9) for the LC method for azithromycin analysis in raw material and in azithromycin tablets (0.9994), and better than the value obtained by Miguel et. al (4) for the LC method for azithromycin analysis in azithromcin tablets (0.996). Accuracy The accuracy of an analytical procedure measures the close- ness of agreement between the value, which is accepted either as a conventional true value or an accepted reference value and value found (i.e., accuracy is a measure of exactness of an analyt- ical method). Accuracy is measured as the percent of analyte recovered by assay after spiking samples in a blind study (15). For the assay determination of azithromycin in drug formulations (capsules and dry suspension), accuracy is evaluated by ana- lyzing synthetic mixtures spiked with known quantities of azithromycin. To document accuracy, a minimum of nine determinations over a minimum of three concentration levels covering the spec- ified range (for example, three concentrations, three replicates for each) were collected. It is performed at 80, 100, and 120% levels of label claim. At each level studied, replicate samples are evalu- ated. The RSDof the replicates provides the analysis variation and gives an indication of the precision of the test method. Moreover, the mean of the replicates, expressed as %of label claim, indicates the accuracy of the test method. The mean recovery of the assay should be within100 2.0%at eachconcentrationover the range of 80120% of nominal concentration (15). To prepare accuracy standard solutions, placebo of the drug formulation (e.g., capsule or drug suspension) has to be prepared according to the formulation procedure. To the required quan- tity of placebo, a known quantity of azithromycin with the same proportion as in the drug formulation has been added to get three concentrations [0.8, 1.0 (nominal concentration), and 1.2 mg/mL of azithromycin]. These standards, then, have been chro- matographed. Three runs have been performed for every con- centration, and then peak area has been recorded. The average recovery and the RSDfor each level have been calculated. Results have shown that the mean recovery of the assay for both drug suspension and capsules as well as for azithromycin rawmaterial is within 100 2.0%at each concentration, and the RSDis lower than 1.0% (Table II). Furthermore, results have shown that recovery data obtained was within the 99.9101.3% range for capsule formulation (mean = 100.4%) and 99.5100.0% range for dry suspension (mean = 99.8%), and the mean recovery for rawmaterial at the nominal concentration (1.0 mg/mL) is 99.6% (Table II). Zubata et al. has obtained comparable recovery data for azithromycin in raw material and in azithromycin tablets (99.8100.0% with a mean of 99.4%) (9). Precision Precision is the measure of the degree of repeatability of an analytical method under normal operation and is normally expressed as the RSD for a statistically significant number of samples. Precision is performed at one level (repeatability). Repeatability is the result of the method operating over a short time interval under the same conditions (injection precision or instrument precision). It is determined froma minimumof nine determinations covering the specified range of the procedure (for example, three levels, three repetitions each), or froma min- imum of six determinations, at 100% of the test or target con- centration. RSD for replicate injections should not be greater than 1.5% (16). The RSD of the peak areas for the recovery data analyzed in accuracy study (see the Method validation section) for each level (80%, 100%, and 120% of the nominal concentration) has been calculated, and it has been found to be less than 1.0% for each level (Table III). The RSD of the peak areas of six replicate injec- tions for the nominal standard concentration (100%) has also been calculated to be 0.2%. These results show that the current method for azithromycin analysis is repeatable. Specificity (stability-indicating evaluation) Specificity is the ability to assess unequivocally the analyte in the presence of components that may be expected to be present, such as impurities, degradation products, and matrix compo- nents (17). It is a measure of the degree of interferences from suchcomponents, ensuring that a peak response is due to a single component only. Specificity is measured and documented in a separation by the resolution, plate count (efficiency), and tailing Journal of Chromatographic Science, Vol. 48, February 2010 89 Figure 5. Chromatogramof 1, azithromycin (1.0 mg/mL azithromycin, added to it 10% of 2M hydrochloric acid). Other experimental conditions are the same as in Figure 2. 1: azithromycin is no more present as it is completely degraded. Time (min) A U Figure 6. Chromatogram of 1, azithromycin in a drug formulation product (capsule). Other experimental conditions are the same as in Figure 2. Resolution, capacity factor, and peak asymmetry for azithromycin peak are 4.8, 4.4, and 1.34, respectively. Time (min) A U Journal of Chromatographic Science, Vol. 48, February 2010 90 factor. Resolution between the active ingredient (e.g. azithromycin) and all the components have to be at least 1.5. Efficiency of the column is not less than 1500 theoretical plates for azithromycin peak, and the tailing factor is not more than 1.5. Specificity may be demonstrated by enhancing degradation of the azithromycin under stress conditions (acid and base hydrol- ysis, and oxidation). Accordingly, 10 mL of 2Mhydrochloric acid, 10 mL of 2Msodiumhydroxide, and 10 mL of 35%hydrogen per- oxide has been added to 100 mL of assay solution. These solu- tions have been chromatographed, and all the peaks in the chromatograms are recorded. Results showed that the resolu- tion between azithromycin and all other degradation products or components is higher than 1.5, which indicates that the method is specific for determination of azithromycin and can separate and detect possible degradation products (Figure 45). We have also found that azithromycin is stable in basic solu- tions (e.g., sodiumhydroxide solution) as it gives no degradation product when it is exposed to 10% of 2M sodium hydroxide (Figure 4). On the other hand, azithromycin has degraded com- pletely in both acidic (10% of 2M hydrochloric acid) and in hydrogen peroxide (10% of 35% hydrogen peroxide) solutions (Figure 5). Zubata et al. has observed that azithromycin showed degradation products following both alkaline and acid hydrolysis (9) while Miguel et al. has observed that azithromycin was slightly degraded in basic media and it was completely degraded in acidic media (4). Detection limit and quantitation limit Detection limit is the lowest concentration of analyte in a sample that canbe detected but not necessarily quantitated under the stated experimental conditions (16). Detection limit can be determined by preparing a solution that is expected to produce a response that is ~ 3 to 10 times baseline noise. The solution is injected three times, and the signal and the noise for each injec- tion are recorded. Each signal-to-noise ratio (S/N) is then calcu- lated, and averaged. The concentration of the solution is used for the determination of the detection limit if the average S/Nratio is between 3 and 10. If it is not between 3 and 10, the solution con- centration is modified as necessary and the experiment is repeated. The limit of detection (LOD) may be expressed as: LOD = 3.3 /S where is the standard deviation of the response, and S is the slope of the calibration curve. Limit of quantitation can be determined in the same manner by using the formula: 10 /S Results showed that the detection and quantitation limits for azithromycin using this method are 0.0005 and 0.0008 mg/mL, respectively. After successful development and validation of this method, we have employed it for the analysis of azithromycin in two drug formulations (capsules and drug suspension) as well as in raw material (Figure 6). Conclusion A new, specific, and validated method for the analysis of azithromycin by using HPLC equipped with UV detection at 210 nm has been developed. This method is accurate, precise, spe- cific, sensitive, and linear. This method can be employed for the analysis of azithromycin in different drug formulations as well as raw material. Related compounds (e.g., impurities, degradation products, and matrix components) can be also separated with good resolution using this validated method. Acknowledgments We would like to thank gratefully Jerusalem Pharmaceuticals for their support and providing us with the necessary instru- ments/apparatus to perform this study. References 1. D. Debremaeker, D. Visky, H.K. Chepkwony, A. Van Schepdael, and E. Roets. Analysis of unknown compounds in azithromycin bulk samples with liquid chro- matography coupled to ion trap mass spectrometry. Rapid Commun. Mass Spectrom. 17: 342350 (2003). 2. A. Khedr and M. Sheha. Quantitative thin layer chromatographic method of anal- ysis of azithromycin in pure and capsule forms. J. Chromatogr. Sci. 41: 1016 (2003). 3. E.F. Fiese and S.H. Steffen. Comparison of. the. acid stability of azithromycin and. erythromycin. J. Animicrob. Chemother. 25 (suppl. A): 3947 (1990). 4. L. Miguel and C. Barbas. LC determination of impurities in azithromycin tablets. J. Pharm. Biomed. Anal. 33: 211217 (2003). 5. C. Taninaka, H. Ohtani, E. Hanada, H. Kotaki, H. Sato, and T. Iga. 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An Alternative Liquid Chromatography-Mass Spectrometric Method For The Determination of Azithromycin in Human Plasma and Its Application To Pharmacokinetic Study of Patients With Malaria