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Advances in simultaneous DSC-FTIR microspectroscopy for rapid solid-state chemical stability studies: some dipeptide drugs as examples.
Adv Drug Deliv Rev. 2012 Apr; 64(5):461-78.AD

Abstract

The solid-state chemistry of drugs has seen growing importance in the pharmaceutical industry for the development of useful API (active pharmaceutical ingredients) of drugs and stable dosage forms. The stability of drugs in various solid dosage forms is an important issue because solid dosage forms are the most common pharmaceutical formulation in clinical use. In solid-state stability studies of drugs, an ideal accelerated method must not only be selected by different complicated methods, but must also detect the formation of degraded product. In this review article, an analytical technique combining differential scanning calorimetry and Fourier-transform infrared (DSC-FTIR) microspectroscopy simulates the accelerated stability test, and simultaneously detects the decomposed products in real time. The pharmaceutical dipeptides aspartame hemihydrate, lisinopril dihydrate, and enalapril maleate either with or without Eudragit E were used as testing examples. This one-step simultaneous DSC-FTIR technique for real-time detection of diketopiperazine (DKP) directly evidenced the dehydration process and DKP formation as an impurity common in pharmaceutical dipeptides. DKP formation in various dipeptides determined by different analytical methods had been collected and compiled. Although many analytical methods have been applied, the combined DSC-FTIR technique is an easy and fast analytical method which not only can simulate the accelerated drug stability testing but also at the same time enable to explore phase transformation as well as degradation due to thermal-related reactions. This technique offers quick and proper interpretations.

Authors+Show Affiliations

Department of Biotechnology, Yuanpei University, Hsin Chu, Taiwan, ROC. sylin@mail.ypu.edu.twNo affiliation info available

Pub Type(s)

Journal Article
Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't
Review

Language

eng

PubMed ID

22300653

Citation

Lin, Shan-Yang, and Shun-Li Wang. "Advances in Simultaneous DSC-FTIR Microspectroscopy for Rapid Solid-state Chemical Stability Studies: some Dipeptide Drugs as Examples." Advanced Drug Delivery Reviews, vol. 64, no. 5, 2012, pp. 461-78.
Lin SY, Wang SL. Advances in simultaneous DSC-FTIR microspectroscopy for rapid solid-state chemical stability studies: some dipeptide drugs as examples. Adv Drug Deliv Rev. 2012;64(5):461-78.
Lin, S. Y., & Wang, S. L. (2012). Advances in simultaneous DSC-FTIR microspectroscopy for rapid solid-state chemical stability studies: some dipeptide drugs as examples. Advanced Drug Delivery Reviews, 64(5), 461-78. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.addr.2012.01.009
Lin SY, Wang SL. Advances in Simultaneous DSC-FTIR Microspectroscopy for Rapid Solid-state Chemical Stability Studies: some Dipeptide Drugs as Examples. Adv Drug Deliv Rev. 2012;64(5):461-78. PubMed PMID: 22300653.
* Article titles in AMA citation format should be in sentence-case
TY - JOUR T1 - Advances in simultaneous DSC-FTIR microspectroscopy for rapid solid-state chemical stability studies: some dipeptide drugs as examples. AU - Lin,Shan-Yang, AU - Wang,Shun-Li, Y1 - 2012/01/24/ PY - 2011/11/04/received PY - 2012/01/12/revised PY - 2012/01/18/accepted PY - 2012/2/4/entrez PY - 2012/2/4/pubmed PY - 2012/7/25/medline SP - 461 EP - 78 JF - Advanced drug delivery reviews JO - Adv Drug Deliv Rev VL - 64 IS - 5 N2 - The solid-state chemistry of drugs has seen growing importance in the pharmaceutical industry for the development of useful API (active pharmaceutical ingredients) of drugs and stable dosage forms. The stability of drugs in various solid dosage forms is an important issue because solid dosage forms are the most common pharmaceutical formulation in clinical use. In solid-state stability studies of drugs, an ideal accelerated method must not only be selected by different complicated methods, but must also detect the formation of degraded product. In this review article, an analytical technique combining differential scanning calorimetry and Fourier-transform infrared (DSC-FTIR) microspectroscopy simulates the accelerated stability test, and simultaneously detects the decomposed products in real time. The pharmaceutical dipeptides aspartame hemihydrate, lisinopril dihydrate, and enalapril maleate either with or without Eudragit E were used as testing examples. This one-step simultaneous DSC-FTIR technique for real-time detection of diketopiperazine (DKP) directly evidenced the dehydration process and DKP formation as an impurity common in pharmaceutical dipeptides. DKP formation in various dipeptides determined by different analytical methods had been collected and compiled. Although many analytical methods have been applied, the combined DSC-FTIR technique is an easy and fast analytical method which not only can simulate the accelerated drug stability testing but also at the same time enable to explore phase transformation as well as degradation due to thermal-related reactions. This technique offers quick and proper interpretations. SN - 1872-8294 UR - https://www.unboundmedicine.com/medline/citation/22300653/Advances_in_simultaneous_DSC_FTIR_microspectroscopy_for_rapid_solid_state_chemical_stability_studies:_some_dipeptide_drugs_as_examples_ L2 - https://linkinghub.elsevier.com/retrieve/pii/S0169-409X(12)00012-9 DB - PRIME DP - Unbound Medicine ER -