Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
10162023 Journal of Pharmaceutical Sciences 2015 9 Pages PDF
Abstract
Warfarin sodium (WS) exists in multiple solid-state forms. The solid-state forms differ in physicochemical properties, and crystalline changes in the drug formulation may influence on the drug product quality and/or clinical performance. It is, therefore, critically important to have a good and reliable analytical method to monitor and quantitate this transformation during stability studies. The aim of the present research was to investigate Raman spectroscopy and solid-state nuclear magnetic resonance (13C ssNMR) methods in conjunction with chemometry to quantitate the amorphous and crystalline WS fractions in the drug products. Compositionally identical formulations of amorphous and crystalline WS were prepared, and mixed in various proportions to make 0%-100% amorphous/crystalline sample matrices. Raman and 13C ssNMR spectra were collected and subjected to partial-least-squares and principle component regressions after mathematical treatment of the data. The model performance parameters such as root-mean-square error of prediction, standard error of prediction, and bias were low for Raman models in comparison to 13C ssNMR models. Models predicted values of the independent sample matrices match closely with the actual values at high level of crystalline WS. Thus, the developed methods provide means to control and quantitate the WS forms fraction in the drug product.
Related Topics
Health Sciences Pharmacology, Toxicology and Pharmaceutical Science Drug Discovery
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