Abstract

The global crisis resulting from adulterated heparin in late 2007 and early 2008 revived the importance of analytical techniques for the purity analysis of heparin products. The utilization of ion chromatography techniques for the separation, detection, and structural determination of heparin and structurally related glycoaminoglycans, including their corresponding oligosaccharides, has become increasingly important. This review summarizes the primary HPLC approaches, particularly strong anion exchange, weak ion exchange, and reversed-phase ion-pair, used for heparin purity analysis as well as structural characterization. Strong anion exchange HPLC has been studied most extensively and currently offers the best separation of crude heparin and heparin-like compounds. Weak anion exchange HPLC has been shown to provide shorter analysis times with lower salt concentrations in the mobile phase but is not as widely developed for the separation of all glycoaminoglycans of interest. Reversed-phase ion-pair HPLC offers fast and effective separations of oligosaccharides derived from glycoaminoglycans that can be coupled to mass spectrometry for structural analysis. However, this method generally does not provide sufficient retention of intact glycoaminoglycans.

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