Abstract

A simple, rapid, sensitive, and precise reversed-phase liquid chromatographic method was developed and validated for the simultaneous determination of four direct-acting antivirals, sofosbuvir (SF), ledipasvir (LD), declatasvir (DC), and simeprevir (SM), in their respective pharmaceutical formulations. Effective chromatographic separation was achieved on an Agilent Eclipse plus C8 column (250 mm × 4.6 mm, 5 µm) at 40 °C with gradient elution using a mobile phase composed of acetonitrile:phosphate buffer (pH 6.5). The quantification of SF and DC was based on peak area measurements at 260 nm, while the quantification of LD and SM was achieved at 330 nm. The linearity was acceptable from 1.0 to 20.0 μg/mL for the studied drugs, with correlation coefficients >0.999. The analytical performance of the newly proposed HPLC procedure was thoroughly validated according to ICH guidelines in terms of linearity, precision (RSD%, 0.39–1.57), accuracy (98.05–101.90%), specificity, limit of detection (LOD) (0.022–0.039 μg/mL), limit of quantification (LOQ) (0.067–0.118 μg/mL), and robustness. The validated HPLC method was successfully used to analyze the abovementioned drugs in their pure and dosage forms without interference from common excipients present in commercial formulations.

Highlights

  • Hepatitis C virus (HCV) infection is a worldwide health threat with 170–180 million infected individuals [1,2]

  • As no method for the simultaneous determination of SF, LD, DC, and SM has been reported to date, the goal of this work was to develop a rapid and simple RP-HPLC method with gradient elution for their simultaneous determination in their pharmaceutical formulations

  • All chemicals used were of analytical grade and solvents were of HPLC grade

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Summary

Introduction

Hepatitis C virus (HCV) infection is a worldwide health threat with 170–180 million infected individuals [1,2]. The virus can cause acute and chronic hepatitis infections, ranging in severity from a mild to serious lifelong illness [3]. Egypt has the largest epidemic of HCV worldwide, and according to the “Egyptian Demographic Health Survey (EDHS)”, approximately 13.2 out 90 million (14.7% of the population) suffer from HCV infection [4]. The early diagnosis of HCV infection is rare and the disease may go unnoticed until serious liver damage has occurred [5]. 2011, the treatment for HCV involvedinvolved a combination of ribavirin of andribavirin PEGylatedUntil.

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