The present study aimed to develop and validate a novel reversed-phase high-performance liquid chromatography method for simultaneous estimation of Diacerein (DIA) and Rhein (Rh, alkaline degradation product and active metabolite) in the presence of various coformers used to prepare eutectic oral formulation. Chromatographic separations were achieved on a Phenomenex Gemini C18 column (250 mm × 4.6 mm, 5 μm) placed in the thermostated column oven at 40°C. The mobile phase, comprising of acetonitrile and 10 mM ammonium acetate (pH 3.0), was eluted through the gradient system with 0.8 mL/min flow rate at 254 nm detection and analytical run time of 14 min. Additionally, the method was validated for specificity, linearity, precision, accuracy, selectivity, limit of quantitation, limit of detection and robustness as per International Conference on Harmonization guideline. The developed method was applied for the comparison of drug release profiles of pure DIA and from prepared eutectic formulations for the quantitation of DIA and Rh in the multicomponent adducts. The achieved method advocated their applicability in routine quality control analysis of DIA formulations without interference of degraded product and excipients.
Azithromycin (AZI) is a semi-synthetic macrolide antibiotic drug, effective against a wide variety of bacteria. The present study describes a simple, accurate, reproducible and precise UV Spectrophotometric method for the estimation of AZI (pH 6.8 Phosphate buffer). The absorbance maximum (λ max ) for AZI was found to be 208nm. The method reveals high sensitivity, with linearity in the 10 µg/ml to 50 µg/ml range. The lower limit of detection was found to be 1.6µg/ml and the limit of quantification was found to be 5µg/ml. All the calibration curves demonstrated a linear relationship between the absorbance and concentration, with the correlation coefficient higher than 0.99. The % recovery was found to be 99.72%. AZI was also subjected to stress degradation under different conditions recommended by the International Conference on Harmonization (ICH).
Introduction:
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.