Journal of pharmaceutical and biomedical analysis
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J Pharm Biomed Anal · Aug 2019
The contamination of valsartan and other sartans, part 1: New findings.
In July 2018 one of the bestselling antihypertensive agents valsartan manufactured in China was found to be contaminated by the "probably carcinogenic" nitrosamine N-nitrosodimethylamine (NDMA), followed by the detection of N-nitrosodiethylamine (NDEA) by us and others soon after. Our work also revealed that two additional non-nitrosamine contaminations valeramide (VLA) and N,N-dimethylvaleramide (VLA-DEM) were present in sartan tablets. Early measurements by others and us were performed by GC-MS or GC-MS/MS, which does not reach the sensitivity needed to find and quantitate trace levels of NDMA and NDEA. ⋯ NDMA, NDEA, VLA and VLA-DIM were found in 21 (13.8%), 9 (5.9%), 13 (8.6%) and 7 (4.6) % of the tablets, respectively. In addition, one candesartan product was found contaminated with NDEA. The implications of our findings for the testing of pharmaceutical products are discussed.
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J Pharm Biomed Anal · Aug 2019
The contamination of valsartan and other sartans, Part 2: Untargeted screening reveals contamination with amides additionally to known nitrosamine impurities.
The recent incidences of contaminated valsartan drug products gave rise to review the suitability of current impurity profiling workflows implemented at authorities and pharmaceutical companies. The major drawback of targeted impurity profiling, where a considerable amount of prior knowledge about possible contaminants is necessary, is the fact that unexpected impurities are overlooked easily. Here, a generic untargeted approach was applied on sartan containing drug products. ⋯ The presented universal workflow makes use of LC-HRMS/MS and multivariate analysis for the interpretation of the data. Sartan samples contaminated with N-nitrosodimethylamine could be very well discriminated from N-nitrosodimethylamine-free samples using the procedure. Furthermore, untargeted approaches revealed two new impurities in various sartans drug products: valeramide and N,N-dimethylvaleramide.