Analysis of Organic Volatile Impurities in Drug Products and Drug Substances
Applications | 2021 | Agilent TechnologiesInstrumentation
Residual organic solvents are commonly used in pharmaceutical synthesis and intermediates and may remain at trace levels in final drug substances and products. Monitoring these volatiles is essential to ensure patient safety, comply with regulatory limits, and maintain product quality. Headspace gas chromatography remains a standard approach in quality control laboratories for assessing residual solvents according to ICH and Pharmacopeial guidelines.
This application note describes the development and validation of a single headspace GC method capable of simultaneously quantifying 29 residual solvents belonging to ICH Classes 2 and 3. The goal was to achieve complete separation within a 30-minute runtime, deliver sensitivity from the limit of quantitation (10% of ICH limit) up to 200%, and demonstrate equivalence or superiority to USP <467> while increasing analytical throughput.
A 100 mg sample of drug substance or product was placed in a 20 mL headspace vial, spiked with 1 mL of N-methyl-2-pyrrolidinone as diluent, and equilibrated. Calibration standards ranged from LOQ to 200% of ICH limits.
All 29 solvents were baseline-resolved within 30 minutes with resolution values exceeding 1.0. Calibration curves showed excellent linearity (R²>0.996) across the tested range. Six-injection precision at LOQ level returned RSD values between 1.4% and 12.1%. Blank runs demonstrated no interfering peaks at target retention times. Robustness testing involving carrier flow variations (±0.14 mL/min) and headspace temperature shifts (±2 °C) maintained cumulative RSD below 15%, meeting ICH Q3C(R6) criteria.
The unified method quantifies Class 2 and Class 3 solvents in a single analysis, eliminating the need for separate runs. The reduced runtime compared to USP <467> (30 min versus 60 min) doubles sample throughput and lowers per-sample cost. High sensitivity and specificity enable laboratories to rapidly screen drug substances, intermediates, and finished products for residual solvents.
Ongoing developments may include coupling headspace sampling with mass spectrometry for enhanced identification of coeluting impurities, and further automation of sample preparation to boost throughput. Miniaturized vial formats and online monitoring could allow in-process control of volatile levels. Adaptation to new solvent guidelines and alignment with global regulatory harmonization remain valuable directions.
The validated headspace GC method fulfills ICH Q3C(R6) and USP <467> requirements for a broad range of residual solvents. It provides a robust, precise, and efficient solution for routine quality control of pharmaceutical products, significantly improving laboratory productivity.
GC, HeadSpace
IndustriesPharma & Biopharma
ManufacturerAgilent Technologies
Summary
Importance of the Topic
Residual organic solvents are commonly used in pharmaceutical synthesis and intermediates and may remain at trace levels in final drug substances and products. Monitoring these volatiles is essential to ensure patient safety, comply with regulatory limits, and maintain product quality. Headspace gas chromatography remains a standard approach in quality control laboratories for assessing residual solvents according to ICH and Pharmacopeial guidelines.
Objectives and Study Overview
This application note describes the development and validation of a single headspace GC method capable of simultaneously quantifying 29 residual solvents belonging to ICH Classes 2 and 3. The goal was to achieve complete separation within a 30-minute runtime, deliver sensitivity from the limit of quantitation (10% of ICH limit) up to 200%, and demonstrate equivalence or superiority to USP <467> while increasing analytical throughput.
Methodology and Instrumentation
A 100 mg sample of drug substance or product was placed in a 20 mL headspace vial, spiked with 1 mL of N-methyl-2-pyrrolidinone as diluent, and equilibrated. Calibration standards ranged from LOQ to 200% of ICH limits.
- Instrument configuration: Agilent 7697A headspace sampler coupled to Agilent 7890B GC with split/splitless inlet and a J&W DB-624 column (30 m × 0.32 mm, 1.8 µm).
- Carrier gas: nitrogen at 1.4 mL/min. FID detection at 250 °C.
- Headspace parameters: vial temperature 90 °C, equilibration 30 min; loop at 100 °C; transfer line at 110 °C.
- Oven program: hold 40 °C, ramp to 60 °C at 4 °C/min, then to 85 °C at 5 °C/min, and finally to 220 °C at 25 °C/min.
Main Results and Discussion
All 29 solvents were baseline-resolved within 30 minutes with resolution values exceeding 1.0. Calibration curves showed excellent linearity (R²>0.996) across the tested range. Six-injection precision at LOQ level returned RSD values between 1.4% and 12.1%. Blank runs demonstrated no interfering peaks at target retention times. Robustness testing involving carrier flow variations (±0.14 mL/min) and headspace temperature shifts (±2 °C) maintained cumulative RSD below 15%, meeting ICH Q3C(R6) criteria.
Benefits and Practical Applications of the Method
The unified method quantifies Class 2 and Class 3 solvents in a single analysis, eliminating the need for separate runs. The reduced runtime compared to USP <467> (30 min versus 60 min) doubles sample throughput and lowers per-sample cost. High sensitivity and specificity enable laboratories to rapidly screen drug substances, intermediates, and finished products for residual solvents.
Future Trends and Potential Applications
Ongoing developments may include coupling headspace sampling with mass spectrometry for enhanced identification of coeluting impurities, and further automation of sample preparation to boost throughput. Miniaturized vial formats and online monitoring could allow in-process control of volatile levels. Adaptation to new solvent guidelines and alignment with global regulatory harmonization remain valuable directions.
Conclusion
The validated headspace GC method fulfills ICH Q3C(R6) and USP <467> requirements for a broad range of residual solvents. It provides a robust, precise, and efficient solution for routine quality control of pharmaceutical products, significantly improving laboratory productivity.
Reference
- ICH Q3C(R6) Guideline for Residual Solvents, International Council for Harmonisation, 2016
- United States Pharmacopeia USP <467> Residual Solvents/Organic Volatile Impurities, USP 32–NF 27
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