J Sep Sci. 2024 Oct;47(19): e202400277
Nitrosamine-related impurities (N-nitrosomethylamino butyric acid [NMBA], N-nitrosodiethylamine [NDEA], N-nitrosodiisopropylamine [NDIPA], N-nitrosomethylphenylamine [NMPA], N-nitrosodibutylamine [NDBA], N-nitrosodimethylamine [NDMA], and N-nitrosoethylisopropylamine [NEIPA]) and 5-[4'-(azidomethyl)-[1,1'-biphenyl]-2-yl]-2H-tetrazole (AZBT) formed during the manufacture of sartan medicines have been classified into human mutagens and carcinogens after long-term treatment. The study developed a simple, economical but highly sensitive procedure for the simultaneous quantification of seven nitrosamines and AZBT impurities in sartan pharmaceuticals. After extraction with methanol (MeOH) 50%, the compounds were analyzed with a reversed-phase liquid chromatography-tandem mass spectroscopy with atmospheric-pressure chemical ionization (APCI) mode (APCI[+] for nitrosamines and APCI[-] for AZBT), selected reaction monitoring, C18 column, gradient elution with 0.1% formic acid in water and in MeOH, respectively. The validated procedure obtained high extraction efficiency (>90%), wide linear range (0.2-50.0 ng/mL NMBA, NDEA, NDIPA, NMPA, and NDBA; 0.5-50.0 ng/mL NDMA and NEIPA; 2.0-100 ng/mL AZBT), limit of quantification < 10% of the acceptance level, recovery range of 85%-115% with relative standard deviation < 15% and minimum matrix effects for all impurities. The procedure was applied to test 16 commercial losartan samples. As a result, eight samples contained AZBT within the current regulatory limits, but no nitrosamine impurities were detected in all samples.
Keywords: atmospheric‐pressure chemical ionization | azidomethyl‐biphenyl‐tetrazole | impurities | losartan | method validation | N‐nitrosamines