Abstract

A simple, precise, and accurate, and stability-indicating isocratic Ultraperformance Liquid Chromatography (UPLC) method was developed for the determination of methdilazine hydrochloride (MDH) in bulk drug and in its tablets. The use of UPLC, with a rapid 5-minute-reversed-phase isocratic separation on a 1.7 μm reversed-phase packing material to provide rapid ‘‘high throughput’’ support for MDH, is demonstrated. The method was developed using Waters Acquity BEH C18 column (100 mm × 2.1 mm, 1.7 μm) with mobile phase consisting of a mixture of potassium dihydrogenorthophosphate and 1-pentane sulphonic acid buffer of pH 4.0 and acetonitrile (60 : 40 v/v). The eluted compound was detected at 254 nm with a UV detector. The standard curve of mean peak area versus concentration showed an excellent linearity over a concentration range 0.5–80 μg mL−1 MDH with regression coefficient () value of 0.9999. The limit of detection () was 0.2 μg mL−1 and the limit of quantification () was 0.5 μg mL−1. Forced degradation of the bulk sample was conducted in accordance with the ICH guidelines. Acidic, basic, hydrolytic, oxidative, thermal, and photolytic degradations were used to assess the stability indicating power of the method. The drug was found to be stable in acidic, basic, thermal, hydrolytic, and photolytic stress conditions and showed slight degradation in oxidative stress condition.

Highlights

  • Methdilazine hydrochloride (MDH), chemically known as (10-[(1-Methyl-3 pyrrolidinyl)methyl]phenothiazine monohydrochloride) [1] (Figure 1), is a synthetic analogue of phenothiazine derivative used as an antihistamine and it is found to possess antipruritic action [2].The drug is official in United States Pharmacopia [3], which describes UV-spectrophotometric assay in aqueous medium

  • Quantification of MDH has been achieved by high-performance liquid chromatography (HPLC) [4,5,6], liquid chromatography [7], spectrofluorimetry [8], differential fluorimetry, and differential UV-spectrophotometry [9]

  • The present method discusses in detail the development and validation of MDH with vital information about its degradation under different stress conditions

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Summary

Introduction

Methdilazine hydrochloride (MDH), chemically known as (10-[(1-Methyl-3 pyrrolidinyl)methyl]phenothiazine monohydrochloride) [1] (Figure 1), is a synthetic analogue of phenothiazine derivative used as an antihistamine and it is found to possess antipruritic action [2].The drug is official in United States Pharmacopia [3], which describes UV-spectrophotometric assay in aqueous medium. There has been an increasing tendency towards development of stability-indicating assays [23,24,25,26], using the approach to stress testing enshrined in International Conference on Harmonisation (ICH) guideline Q2A(R2) [27]. This approach is being extended to pharmaceuticals to enable accurate and precise quantification of drugs in the presence of their degradation products

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