Abstract
Many anticancer drugs are reported to have low physicochemical stability after dilution; therefore, producers impose short times from reconstitution, dilution, and the end of administration. The precariousness of cancer patients’ health in real-life experience within cancer hospitals often forces delays in the drug administration with respect to the standard treatment schedule timing, because of acute toxicities or the need to postpone a control analysis before administration. The public health costs for discarded anticancer drugs due to administration interruptions can be avoided, thanks to independent analytical studies, which integrate the producer’s data reported in the technical sheet, referring to the real conditions of preparation in a sterile atmosphere under a cabin in a laboratory dedicated to handling cytotoxic drugs in controlled conditions of temperature, pressure, and particulate contamination. Decitabine is apparently an unstable molecule, whose reported stability is only 3 h at 2–8 °C when diluted, while the mother solution must be immediately used or, otherwise, discarded. This study has investigated the physicochemical stability of decitabine both in diluted infusion bags and in sterile water reconstituted syringes at 4 °C for 0, 24, 48, and 72 h. In all performed studies, the stability-indicating method involves, for the first time, the use of liquid chromatography–tandem mass spectrometry analysis. Unexpectedly, both diluted and reconstituted solutions of decitabine are more stable than previously reported data, with a 48 h-long physicochemical stability at 2–8 °C and protected from light.
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