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Development and validation of spectrophotometric method for the determination of DPP-4 inhibitor, sitagliptin, in its pharmaceutical preparations

Abstract

A simple, sensitive and reproducible spectrophotometric method was developed for the determination of sitagliptin phosphate in bulk and in pharmaceutical formulations. The proposed method is based on condensation of the primary amino group of sitagliptin phosphate with acetyl acetone and formaldehyde producing a yellow colored product, which is measured spectrophotometrically at 430nm. The color was stable for about 1 hour. Beer's law is obeyed over a concentration range of 5-25 µg/ml. The apparent molar absorptivity and Sandell sensitivity values are 1.067 x 10(4) Lmol-1cm-1 and 0.0471 µgcm-2 respectively. All the variables were studied to optimize the reaction conditions. No interference was observed in the presence of common pharmaceutical excipients. The validity of the method was tested by analyzing sitagliptin phosphate in its pharmaceutical preparations. Good recoveries were obtained. The developed method was successfully employed for the determination of sitagliptin phosphate in various pharmaceutical preparations.

Sitagliptin phosphate; Acetyl acetone; Beer's Law; Sandell's sensitivity


ARTICLE

Development and validation of spectrophotometric method for the determination of DPP-4 inhibitor, sitagliptin, in its pharmaceutical preparations

C. Bala SekaranI,* * Corresponding Author: C. Bala Sekaran, 20-3/2-5, II Floor, Ramalayam Street, Ayodhya nagar, Vijayawada - 520 003. Andhra Pradesh. E-Mail: balumphil@gmail.com. Call: 91-866-2538492 ; A. Prameela RaniII

IDepartment of Biotechnology, J. K. C. College, Guntur, India

IIDepartment of Pharmaceutics, K.V.S.R. Siddhartha College of Pharmaceutical Sciences, Vijayawada, India

ABSTRACT

A simple, sensitive and reproducible spectrophotometric method was developed for the determination of sitagliptin phosphate in bulk and in pharmaceutical formulations. The proposed method is based on condensation of the primary amino group of sitagliptin phosphate with acetyl acetone and formaldehyde producing a yellow colored product, which is measured spectrophotometrically at 430nm. The color was stable for about 1 hour. Beer's law is obeyed over a concentration range of 5-25 µg/ml. The apparent molar absorptivity and Sandell sensitivity values are 1.067 x 104 Lmol-1cm-1 and 0.0471 µgcm-2 respectively. All the variables were studied to optimize the reaction conditions. No interference was observed in the presence of common pharmaceutical excipients. The validity of the method was tested by analyzing sitagliptin phosphate in its pharmaceutical preparations. Good recoveries were obtained. The developed method was successfully employed for the determination of sitagliptin phosphate in various pharmaceutical preparations.

Keywords: Sitagliptin phosphate, Acetyl acetone, Beer's Law, Sandell's sensitivity.

INTRODUCTION

Sitagliptin phosphate(STP)(1-4) is 1,2,4-triazolo[4,3-a]pyrazine,7-[(3R)-3-amino-1-oxo-4-(2,4,5-trifluorophenyl)butyl]-5,6,7,8-tetrahydro-3-(trifluoromethyl)-, phosphate, whose structure is given in the Fig. 1. It is used in the treatment of diabetes. It is an oral antihyperglycemic (anti-diabetic) drug of the dipeptidyl peptidase-4 (DPP-4) inhibitor class. Literature survey reveals that only LC-MS (5-8) methods were reported for the determination of sitagliptin phosphate in plasma and urine of humans, rats and dogs. So far, no assay procedure has been reported for the determination of this drug in its pharmaceutical formulations. Among the various methods available for the determination of drugs, spectrophotometry continues to be very popular, because of their simplicity, specificity and low cost. This study presents new spectrophotometric method for the determination of sitagliptin phosphate in bulk and pharmaceutical formulations. The developed method is based on the reaction of sitagliptin phosphate with acetyl acetone and formaldehyde producing Hantzsch product.


EXPERIMENTAL

Apparatus

• Spectral and absorbance measurements were carried out by using Systronics UV - Visible Double beam spectrophotometer model 2201.

• Systronics digital pH meter was used to adjust and determine the hydrogen ion concentration (pH) of the buffer solution.

Materials and Reagents: All the chemicals used were of analytical grade. All the solutions were freshly prepared in distilled water.

• Acetylacetone: 8.4% v/v solution was freshly prepared by mixing 2.1 ml of acetyl acetone with 10 ml of acetate buffer (pH 5) and diluted to 25 ml with distilled water.

• Formaldehyde (34 - 40%): Twenty percent solution was prepared by mixing 5 ml of formaldehyde with 10ml of acetate buffer (pH 5) and diluted to 25 ml with distilled water.

• Acetate buffer (pH 5): Prepared by dissolving 13.6 g of sodium acetate and 6 ml of glacial acetic acid in sufficient water to produce 1000 ml.

• Pharmaceutical grade Sitagliptin phosphate, certified to be 99.8% pure was procured from local pharmaceutical industry and was used as received.

• Januvia 100mg, 50mg and 25mg (labeled to contain 100mg, 50mg and 25mg of sitagliptin phosphate per tablet) were obtained from the local pharmacy.

Standard drug solution

Stock solution of STP (1 mg/ml) was prepared by dissolving 100 mg of STP in distilled water and making the volume to 100 ml in a standard volumetric flask. Working solution of lower concentration (100 µg/ml) was prepared by further dilution of the above standard stock solution with water.

General procedure for the determination of Sitagliptin phosphate

Different aliquots of working standard solutions containing 50-250µg of STP was transferred into a series of serially numbered 10ml volumetric fl asks. To each flask 1 ml of 8.4% v/v acetyl acetone solution and 0.5 ml of 20% formaldehyde reagents were added. The flasks were stoppered, contents were mixed well. The mixture was heated for 5 min, cooled and diluted to 10 ml with distilled water. The absorbance of the yellow color solution was measured at 430 nm using the experiment as a blank. The amount of sitagliptin phosphate present in the sample was computed from the corresponding calibration curve.

The calibration graph was prepared was prepared by plotting absorbance versus concentration of drug and the concentration of the unknown was read from the calibration graph or computed from the regression equation derived from the Beer's law data. The calibration graph was then prepared by plotting the absorbance versus concentration of the drug

Assay procedure for pharmaceutical tablets

For the analysis of STP, three brands of commercially available tablets (20) were weighed and ground into a fine powder. An accurately weighed portion of the powder equivalent to 100mg of sitagliptin phosphate was transferred in to a 100ml beaker containing small volume of water and the solution was shaken thoroughly for 10-15 minutes and filtered through a whatman filter paper no.1 to remove the insoluble matter. The filter paper was washed with water and the washings were added to the fi ltrate, the final volume (100ml) was made with water. A suitable aliquot of this solution in the working range of sitagliptin phosphate was treated as per procedure described in the above determination of pure sitagliptin phosphate. The nominal content of STP in the tablets was calculated either from a previously plotted calibration graph or using the regression equation

RESULTS AND DISCUSSION

Determination of Absorption Maximamax ): To determine the λmax 10 µg/ml of the STP was added to 10 ml volumetric fl ask. Then 1 ml of 8.4% v/v acetyl acetone solution and 0.5 ml of 20% formaldehyde reagents were added. The contents were mixed well. The mixture was heated for 5 min, cooled and diluted to 10 ml with distilled water. The absorbance was measured against reagent blank in the range of 400-700 nm. λmax for STP was found to be 430 nm. Absorption spectrum of the proposed method was shown in Fig. 2. Under the experimental conditions each reagent blank showed a negligible absorbance at the corresponding λmax.


Chemistry of the colored species

Hantzsch reaction is a known condensation reaction that was reported in the literatures as a useful pathway for pyrrole and pyridine synthesis (9). In the same manner, acetylacetone together with formaldehyde react with aliphatic amines by Hantzsch reaction forming a yellow product that can be measured spectrophotometrically or spectrofluorimetrically. This reaction was applied for the determination of certain sulpha-Drug (10), kanamycin (11), lisinopril (12) and gabapentin and cefprozil (13).

The proposed method for determination of STP (primary amine compound) was based on Hantzsch condensation reaction using acetylacetone as β -diketone and formaldehyde as an aldehyde to form a colored condensation product. The formed yellow color showed maximum absorption at 430 nm (Fig. 3). The probable reaction mechanism was based on the reported method (14) is given in Fig.2


Investigation of Assay Parameters

Optimum reagent concentrations required for the formation of sensitive and quantitative colored products were determined by varying one reagent concentration and fixing the concentrations of other reagents and its effect on absorbance was measured at 430nm.

Effect of heating time:

To study the effect of heating time for the development of maximum color, the contents of the mixture were heated for up to 30 min at 100 ± 1ºC. The intensity of the color developed was measured at room temperature (25 ± 1ºC) after dilution to 10.0ml with double distilled water. It is apparent from this investigation that the maximum intensity of color was obtained after 5 min of heating and remained constant up to 30 min. Therefore, the optimum heating time was fixed at 5 min.

Effect of reagent concentration:

The effect of acetyl acetone and formaldehyde concentration on the absorbance was studied; volumes from 0.5-2.5ml of 8.4% acetyl acetone solutions and 0.1 to 1.0ml of 20% formaldehyde solutions were examined. The investigations showed that 1ml of acetyl acetone and 0.5ml of formaldehyde gave maximum absorbance. So the same volumes of both the reagents were chosen for the procedure.

Effect of pH:

Different acetate buffers with pH range of 3.0 - 7.0 were tried and pH 5 was the pH of choice for the proposed method.

Effect of Solvents:

Different diluting solvents were used, such as water, ethanol, methanol, acetonitrile and acetone. Best color intensities were obtained using the first three solvents; water was used, being the most available solvent.

Interference Studies

To study the potential interference from the commonly used excipients and other additives such as glucose, lactose, starch, sodium starch glycolate, cellulose, magnesium stearate and ascorbic acid, recovery studies were carried out. Under the experimental conditions employed, to a known amount of drug (sitagliptin phosphate 25 µg/ml), excipients in different concentrations were added and analyzed. Results of the recovery analysis are presented in Table 1. Excipients at the concentrations shown in Table 1 do not interfere with the assay. In addition recoveries in most cases were around 100% and the lower relative standard deviation (RSD) values indicate the good precision of the proposed method.

Validation of the method:

Detection and Quantifi cation Limits: According to the Analytical Methods Committee(15) the detection limit (LOD) is the concentration of drug corresponding to a signal equal to the blank mean (YB) plus three times the standard deviation of the blank (SB). Quantification limit (LOQ) is the concentration of drug corresponding to the blank mean plus ten times the standard deviation of the blank. The LOD and LOQ values for STP were found to be 1.947 and 5.90 µg /ml respectively.

Quantification: The optical characteristics such as Beer's law limits (Fig: 4), Sandell's sensitivity and molar absorptivity were calculated for the proposed method and the results are summarized in Table 2. Regression analysis of the Beer's law plot at their λmax revealed a good correlation. Graphs of absorbance versus concentration showed zero intercept and are described by the regression equation Y = bx + a (where Y is the absorbance, b is the slope, x is the concentration of drug in µg /ml and a is the intercept) obtained by least squares method. The results were summarized in Table 2.


Accuracy precision and recovery studies: The accuracy and precision of the proposed method was evaluated by performing five replicate determinations of STP in pure form at three different concentrations (5, 10 and 15 µg/ml) by short term (intra day) and daily (inter day) precisions (Table 3). The standard analytical errors, relative standard deviations (RSD) and recoveries obtained in the intra day and inter day analysis for the proposed method was found to be acceptable. Thus the proposed method is effective for the determination of STP.

The accuracy of the proposed method was further checked by performing recovery experiments through standard addition technique. For this purpose, a known amount of pure STP was added to pre-analyzed dosage forms and then determined by the recommended procedure. The results (Table 4) shown that the mean recovery and relative standard deviation (RSD) were in the range of 99.94-100.12 and 0.26-0.54% indicating the reproducibility of the method. No interference from the common excipients was observed.

ANALYSIS OF PHARMACEUTICAL PREPARATIONS

The proposed methods were applied to the analysis of STP in pharmaceutical dosage forms and the results were statistically compared with UV method by calculating the Student's t- and F-values. The evaluated t- and F-values were less than the tabulated values at the 95% confidence level for eight degrees of freedom (16), as revealed by the results complied in Table 5. This actually suggests that the proposed methods are accurate and precise as the UV method.

CONCLUSIONS

The proposed method was quite simple and do not require any pretreatment of the drug and tedious extraction procedure. The methods have wider linear range with good accuracy and precision. Hence, the data presented in the manuscript "Development and validation of a spectrophotometric method for the determination of a DPP-4 inhibitor, sitagliptin, in its pharmaceutical preparations" demonstrate that the proposed method was accurate, precise, linear, selective and offer advantages of reagent availability and stability, less time consumption and high sensitivity. Thus it can be extended for routine analysis of STP in pharmaceutical industries, hospitals and research laboratories. Unlike the LC/MS procedure and high performance liquid chromatography procedures, the UV-visible spectrophotometer instrument is simple and not of high cost, on the other hand in terms of simplicity and expense, the method could be considered superior in comparison with the previously reported methods. Moreover the methods are free from interferences by common additives and excipients.

ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS

The authors are grateful to the Management of J.K.C College, Guntur and Management of Siddhartha Academy, Vijayawada for their continuous support and encouragement for providing the necessary facilities.

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  • *
    Corresponding Author: C. Bala Sekaran, 20-3/2-5, II Floor, Ramalayam Street, Ayodhya nagar, Vijayawada - 520 003. Andhra Pradesh. E-Mail:
    balumphil@gmail.com. Call: 91-866-2538492
  • Publication Dates

    • Publication in this collection
      09 Dec 2010
    • Date of issue
      Sept 2010
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