Abstract

In this paper, vilazodone (VLD), a serotonin modulator prescribed for major depressive disorder, was investigated using a rapid, highly sensitive, and eco-friendly spectrofluorometric approach. The native fluorescence of VLD, originating from its indole moiety, exhibited an emission peak at 486 nm upon excitation at 241 nm. However, the presence of a piperazinyl nitrogen atom in the VLD structure, acting as an electron donor, significantly diminished the fluorescence intensity through photoinduced electron transfer (PET) to the indole ring. However, by protonating this nitrogen atom using 0.02 M Teorell-Stenhagen buffer (pH 3.5), inhibition of the PET process effectively blocked electron transfer, restoring the fluorescent properties of the drug. Further, an enhancement in the fluorescence was achieved by employing methanol as the solvent, resulting in a 1.5-fold increase. The combined use of PET blockage and methanol enabled the detection of VLD at levels as low as 0.78 ng mL-1. Calibration analysis demonstrated linearity within the range 5-400 ng mL-1, exhibiting a correlation coefficient of 0.9998 and a limit of quantification of 2.37 ng mL-1. The method obeyed the requirements of International Council on Harmonization (ICH). The proposed approach was applied for the accurate measurement of VLD in pharmaceutical tablets, content uniformity testing based on USP requirements, and determining VLD concentration in spiked human plasma. Moreover, the environmental impact, in addition to practical effectiveness, of the proposed approach was evaluated using different metrics.

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