Abstract

Hypertension and hyperlipidemia frequently coexist and are correlated with elevated cardiovascular adverse outcomes. Fixed dose combination tablets containing antihypertensive and antihyperlipidemic drugs have the potential to improve patient compliance. Telmisartan and rosuvastatin fixed dose combination tablet has been recently formulated. This study provided the first fluorescence spectroscopic method for simultaneously quantifying telmisartan and rosuvastatin in tablet dosage form and plasma. The native fluorescence spectra of telmisartan and rosuvastatin completely overlapped, making direct measurement unachievable. However, through the implementation of synchronous fluorescence measurements of telmisartan and rosuvastatin at a Δλ = 60, distinct narrow bands were observed at 358 nm and 375 nm, respectively. Regrettably, the challenge of overlapping remained unresolved. Nevertheless, by converting these synchronous spectra into first-order spectra, the problem of overlapping was completely resolved. This conversion also allowed for the selective quantification of telmisartan and rosuvastatin at 374 nm and 358 nm, respectively. The validity of this method was confirmed in accordance with ICH guidelines, yielding satisfactory results in terms of the validation characteristics. The method demonstrated linear relationships between the response and the studied drugs concentrations in working range of 50–1000 ng/mL for telmisartan and 100–2000 ng/mL for rosuvastatin. The described methodology was applied for the pharmacokinetic study of telmisartan and rosuvastatin in rat plasma after a single oral dose of 4 mg/kg telmisartan and 50 mg/kg rosuvastatin. Pharmacokinetic analyses revealed a moderate drug-drug interaction between the two drugs, which was not considered to be clinically significant. Moreover, the described method was assessed in terms of sensitivity and environmental sustainability against three previously documented methods. The comparison effectively underscores the supremacy of the proposed technique over the documented techniques.

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