Abstract

The widely applied reversed phase high-performance liquid chromatography (RP-HPLC) is an indispensable purification technique in drug discovery. During drug discovery, recovery was usually calculated based on the weight of the purified product after drying over the weight of the crude material multiplied by the assumed purity from HPLC/UV area percent of the product. Such a purity assumption can be off significantly when the crude material contains water, solvents, other UV-inactive impurities and inorganic salts. In this paper, we report a simple and efficient way to estimate recovery of preparative HPLC purification process. It is based on the ratio of the HPLC/UV peak area measured for the product in the crude solution and that in the final collected fraction with both accounted for their volumes. This approach eliminates not only the need for drying of the collected fraction to calculate recovery but also the inaccuracy associated with the true content in the crude sample using the traditional method. A systematic study was conducted to verify this method using caffeine mixed with various UV-active and -inactive impurities. The calculated recoveries using this approach were found to be consistent within 4% with the true recoveries based on dry weight estimation. The approach has been successfully applied for our in-house purifications. Furthermore, the approach was extended to library purifications, where in many cases heart-cutting the desired peaks is used to meet the purity requirements.

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