Product is not in USP. I mean USP <621> says SS should have 5-6 injections std mean peak area. How critical is this? I agree MEAN of higher number will be closer to true value, but if I know std solution is not stable, longer I run, it will get fruther from true value. Is it acceptable to do less than 5 injections and take the mean for calculations?
There's a little bit of confusion here. Is this an existing, validated method that you are running and having problems with (that's the assumption that I, and I believe, others having been working under) or is this a new method that you will be validating (or is it a "quick and dirty" method that will not require validation?
If it's an existing, validated method, then the solution stability issue should have been addressed at or before the method was validated. Follow krickos's advice and get more information.
If you will be validating the method, the krickos (again) makes a good that there *are* exceptions to the general rules. The best approach would be to deal with the chemistry that's causing the solution stability issue in the first place. If that's not feasible, then putting limits on the allowed time from sample prep to analysis may be required, and you may have to prep 5-6 samples to get your statistics.
If it's a quick-and-dirty method, then do the best you can and don't worry about it.
While the mean and standard deviation of 5-6 replicates may seem like a meaningless exercise, it is very important. To grossly oversimplify: the confidence interval of the analysis needs to be tighter than the control limits on the product (e.g. if your manufacturing specification is that a tablet contains 98 - 102 mcg of API, then you need to have an analysis with a confidence interval of 1 mcg or so).