Enhanced Productivity for Residual Solvent Analysis in Pharmaceutical Products According to USP 467 by Using a New Valve and Loop Static Headspace Sampler
Posters | 2019 | Thermo Fisher Scientific | PittconInstrumentation
Residual solvents used in pharmaceutical manufacturing can remain as impurities in final products, posing potential health risks. Regulatory guidelines such as USP <467> set strict limits and performance criteria for detecting and quantifying these volatile organics. Efficient and reliable analytical workflows are essential in quality control laboratories to ensure patient safety and regulatory compliance.
This work evaluates a new valve-and-loop static headspace autosampler (TriPlus 500) coupled to a TRACE 1310 GC-FID for analysis of Class 1, 2A, and 2B residual solvents following USP <467> procedures. The aim is to increase sample throughput, reduce incubation times, and maintain or exceed the required sensitivity, resolution, and repeatability compared to the standard method.
Standard solutions of Class 1, 2A, and 2B solvents were prepared in DMSO or water per USP <467>. Samples of dispersive aspirin and paracetamol/caffeine tablets were spiked at specified concentration limits. Procedures A, B, and C (screening, identity confirmation, quantification) were executed with optimized headspace equilibration, vial shaking, and efficient pneumatic control to minimize carry-over.
The optimized workflow delivered baseline separation of critical pairs (e.g., acetonitrile/dichloromethane) in under 8 minutes versus 60 minutes in the USP default method, yielding a >7-fold speed improvement. System suitability tests met all USP criteria: Class 1 S/N > 5:1, Rs > 1.0. Linearity across four calibration levels produced R² ≥ 0.997 with residuals < 4%. Peak area repeatability (%RSD) was < 3% for 18 consecutive injections. Carry-over after nine blank injections was < 0.0015%. Efficient vial shaking cut incubation times by two-thirds without affecting precision.
The faster GC oven programming and enhanced headspace sampling deliver high throughput while upholding regulatory standards. Laboratories can reduce per-sample analysis time, lower solvent and energy consumption, and improve data traceability through integrated e-workflows. The robust pneumatic design and inert flow path ensure consistent performance for routine QC of pharmaceutical products.
Advances in headspace automation, shorter columns with novel stationary phases, and real-time data analytics are likely to further accelerate residual solvent testing. Integration with mass spectrometric detectors could expand analytical scope to trace-level contaminants. Continuous method modernization will support increasingly complex drug formulations and tighter regulatory expectations.
The TriPlus 500 static headspace sampler paired with the TRACE 1310 GC-FID offers a validated, high-throughput alternative to the USP <467> default method. It achieves rapid separation, reliable quantification, and strict compliance with sensitivity, resolution, and precision requirements, making it well suited for pharmaceutical residual solvent analysis.
GC, HeadSpace
IndustriesPharma & Biopharma
ManufacturerThermo Fisher Scientific
Summary
Significance of the Topic
Residual solvents used in pharmaceutical manufacturing can remain as impurities in final products, posing potential health risks. Regulatory guidelines such as USP <467> set strict limits and performance criteria for detecting and quantifying these volatile organics. Efficient and reliable analytical workflows are essential in quality control laboratories to ensure patient safety and regulatory compliance.
Objectives and Study Overview
This work evaluates a new valve-and-loop static headspace autosampler (TriPlus 500) coupled to a TRACE 1310 GC-FID for analysis of Class 1, 2A, and 2B residual solvents following USP <467> procedures. The aim is to increase sample throughput, reduce incubation times, and maintain or exceed the required sensitivity, resolution, and repeatability compared to the standard method.
Methodology
Standard solutions of Class 1, 2A, and 2B solvents were prepared in DMSO or water per USP <467>. Samples of dispersive aspirin and paracetamol/caffeine tablets were spiked at specified concentration limits. Procedures A, B, and C (screening, identity confirmation, quantification) were executed with optimized headspace equilibration, vial shaking, and efficient pneumatic control to minimize carry-over.
Used Instrumentation
- TriPlus 500 Static Headspace Sampler
- Thermo Scientific TRACE 1310 Gas Chromatograph
- TG-624 SilMS capillary column (30 m × 0.32 mm × 1.8 μm)
- Instant Connect Split/Splitless injector and FID detector
- Chromeleon 7.2 CDS software compliant with FDA 21 CFR Part 11
Main Results and Discussion
The optimized workflow delivered baseline separation of critical pairs (e.g., acetonitrile/dichloromethane) in under 8 minutes versus 60 minutes in the USP default method, yielding a >7-fold speed improvement. System suitability tests met all USP criteria: Class 1 S/N > 5:1, Rs > 1.0. Linearity across four calibration levels produced R² ≥ 0.997 with residuals < 4%. Peak area repeatability (%RSD) was < 3% for 18 consecutive injections. Carry-over after nine blank injections was < 0.0015%. Efficient vial shaking cut incubation times by two-thirds without affecting precision.
Benefits and Practical Applications
The faster GC oven programming and enhanced headspace sampling deliver high throughput while upholding regulatory standards. Laboratories can reduce per-sample analysis time, lower solvent and energy consumption, and improve data traceability through integrated e-workflows. The robust pneumatic design and inert flow path ensure consistent performance for routine QC of pharmaceutical products.
Future Trends and Potential Applications
Advances in headspace automation, shorter columns with novel stationary phases, and real-time data analytics are likely to further accelerate residual solvent testing. Integration with mass spectrometric detectors could expand analytical scope to trace-level contaminants. Continuous method modernization will support increasingly complex drug formulations and tighter regulatory expectations.
Conclusion
The TriPlus 500 static headspace sampler paired with the TRACE 1310 GC-FID offers a validated, high-throughput alternative to the USP <467> default method. It achieves rapid separation, reliable quantification, and strict compliance with sensitivity, resolution, and precision requirements, making it well suited for pharmaceutical residual solvent analysis.
Reference
- United States Pharmacopeia. Organic Volatile Impurities, USP <467>, USP 38, 2015.
- United States Pharmacopeia. General Notices and Requirements, Title 21 CFR Part 11, USP 38, 2015.
- Thermo Fisher Scientific. Residual Solvent Analysis Application Note 10676, 2018.
- Thermo Fisher Scientific. Residual Solvent Analysis Technical Note 10679, 2018.
- Thermo Fisher Scientific. Residual Solvent Analysis Technical Note 10681, 2018.
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