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1.
Int J Mol Sci ; 24(24)2023 Dec 15.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38139337

ABSTRACT

An accurate, rapid, and selective quantitative nuclear magnetic resonance method was developed and validated to assess the purity of IMM-H014, a novel drug for the treatment of metabolic-associated fatty liver disease (MAFLD), and four related substances (impurities I, II, III, and IV). In this study, we obtained spectra of IMM--H014 and related substances in deuterated chloroform using dimethyl terephthalate (DMT) as the internal standard reference. Quantification was performed using the 1H resonance signals at δ 8.13 ppm for DMT and δ 6.5-7.5 ppm for IMM-H014 and its related substances. Several key experimental parameters were investigated and optimized, such as pulse angle and relaxation delay. Methodology validation was conducted based on the International Council for Harmonization guidelines and verified with satisfactory specificity, precision, linearity, accuracy, robustness, and stability. In addition, the calibration results of the samples were consistent with those obtained from the mass balance method. Thus, this research provides a reliable and practical protocol for purity analysis of IMM-H014 and its critical impurities and contributes to subsequent clinical quality control research.


Subject(s)
Liver Diseases , Humans , Magnetic Resonance Spectroscopy/methods , Quality Control , Calibration
2.
J Anal Methods Chem ; 2023: 3116223, 2023.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37575214

ABSTRACT

Methyl 7,7'-dimethoxy-5'-(morpholinomethyl)-[4,4'-bibenzo[d][1,3] dioxole]-5-carboxylate methanesulfonate (IMM) is an innovative drug for the treatment of nonalcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD) owing to its high efficacy and low toxicity. In this study, five minor impurities (I, II, III, IV, and V) were identified and analyzed using spectroscopic evidence, chemical synthetic methods, and liquid chromatography-tandem mass spectrometry (LC-MS/MS). The impurities included hydrolysates and oxidation by-products extracted from both the drug in its final formulation and during synthesis. Toxicity prediction revealed potential carcinogenicity of impurity V containing an N-oxygen fragment. A reliable and selective HPLC method for the quantitative analysis of impurities I-IV and a sensitive HPLC-MS/MS method for potential genotoxic impurity V were developed and optimized. The methods were validated based on the International Council for Harmonization guidelines. Satisfactory linearity was obtained for the analytes over the range of 0.1-2.0 µg/mL for impurities I-IV and 0.3-30.0 ng/mL for impurity V, and in all cases, the fitting correlation coefficients exceeded 0.999. The obtained limits of detection values were 0.05 ng/mL and 0.005 µg/mL for impurity V and impurities I-IV, respectively. The precision and repeatability of the methods were less than 1.08% and 8.72% for each impurity. The recovery percentages of all impurities were in the range of 91.18%-111.27%, with the relative standard deviation of less than 3.69%. The greenness assessment of the HPLC method and the HPLC-MS/MS method were evaluated by using AGREE software with a score value of 0.72 and 0.68, respectively. The recommended procedures that were accurate, specific, and ecofriendly were applied to the existing active pharmaceutical ingredients of IMM, and they generated satisfactory results.

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