Evan M. Hetrick, Brian W. Pack, Chad N. Wolfe, Meng Zhao
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
The concept of mass balance is discussed as it pertains to the pharmaceutical development of therapeutic peptides. Case studies are presented demonstrating how to perform a mass balance assessment on solid drug substance and solution drug product, and the role of mass balance in the context of the overall product control strategy is discussed. Utilizing mass balance as a specification test where the result is calculated from other critical quality attribute tests, each with their own specification, offers little value as a formalized quality acceptance criterion and may create more deviations, non-value added investigations, and potential batch failures. While useful in characterizing the performance of analytical methods and as part of a rigorous understanding of the manufacturing process and control strategy development, mass balance should not be required as a specification control and should instead be demonstrated during method development and through well-designed forced degradation experiments. Analytical method variability is discussed in relation to the analytical target profile, and the overall impact of sources of variability on the mass balance calculation is described in support of this position.
期刊介绍:
This journal is an international medium directed towards the needs of academic, clinical, government and industrial analysis by publishing original research reports and critical reviews on pharmaceutical and biomedical analysis. It covers the interdisciplinary aspects of analysis in the pharmaceutical, biomedical and clinical sciences, including developments in analytical methodology, instrumentation, computation and interpretation. Submissions on novel applications focusing on drug purity and stability studies, pharmacokinetics, therapeutic monitoring, metabolic profiling; drug-related aspects of analytical biochemistry and forensic toxicology; quality assurance in the pharmaceutical industry are also welcome.
Studies from areas of well established and poorly selective methods, such as UV-VIS spectrophotometry (including derivative and multi-wavelength measurements), basic electroanalytical (potentiometric, polarographic and voltammetric) methods, fluorimetry, flow-injection analysis, etc. are accepted for publication in exceptional cases only, if a unique and substantial advantage over presently known systems is demonstrated. The same applies to the assay of simple drug formulations by any kind of methods and the determination of drugs in biological samples based merely on spiked samples. Drug purity/stability studies should contain information on the structure elucidation of the impurities/degradants.