Abstract
In this paper, the mass spectrometry (MS) detection has been applied for screening of fosinopril sodium impurities which arise during forced stress study. Before MS analysis, liquid chromatographic method with suitable mobile phase composition was developed. The separation was done on SunFire 100 mm × 4.6 mm 3.5 μm particle size column. The mobile phases which consisted of methanol–ammonium acetate buffer–acetic acid, in different ratios, were used in a preliminary study. Flow rate was 0.3 mL min −1. Under these conditions, percent of methanol, concentration of ammonium acetate buffer and acetic acid content were tested simultaneously applying central composite design (CCD) and artificial neural network (ANN). The combinations of experimental design (ED) and ANN present powerful technique in method optimization. Input and output variables from CCD were used for network training, verification and testing. Multiple layer perceptron (MLP) with back propagation (BP) algorithm was chosen for network training. When the optimal neural topology was selected, network was trained by adjusting strength of connections between neurons in order to adapt the outputs of whole network to be closer to the desired outputs, or to minimize the sum of the squared errors. From the method optimization the following mobile phase composition was selected as appropriate: methanol–10 mM ammonium acetate buffer–acidic acid (80:19.5:0.5 v/v/v). This mobile phase was used as inlet for MS. According to molecular structure and literature data, electrospray positive ion mode was applied for analysis of fosinopril sodium and its impurities. The proposed method could be used for screening of fosinopril sodium impurities in bulk and pharmaceuticals, as well as for tracking the degradation under stress conditions.
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